Article Synopsis

  • Ruminant meat is a significant protein source for humans, but its production harms the environment through deforestation, greenhouse gas emissions, and water usage.
  • Alternative options like plant-based meat and microbial protein (MP) have been proposed to mitigate these environmental impacts of livestock.
  • A study suggests that replacing 20% of ruminant meat consumption with MP by 2050 could significantly reduce deforestation and emissions, but scaling up MP further shows diminishing returns in these benefits.

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Article Abstract

Ruminant meat provides valuable protein to humans, but livestock production has many negative environmental impacts, especially in terms of deforestation, greenhouse gas emissions, water use and eutrophication. In addition to a dietary shift towards plant-based diets, imitation products, including plant-based meat, cultured meat and fermentation-derived microbial protein (MP), have been proposed as means to reduce the externalities of livestock production. Life cycle assessment (LCA) studies have estimated substantial environmental benefits of MP, produced in bioreactors using sugar as feedstock, especially compared to ruminant meat. Here we present an analysis of MP as substitute for ruminant meat in forward-looking global land-use scenarios towards 2050. Our study complements LCA studies by estimating the environmental benefits of MP within a future socio-economic pathway. Our model projections show that substituting 20% of per-capita ruminant meat consumption with MP globally by 2050 (on a protein basis) offsets future increases in global pasture area, cutting annual deforestation and related CO emissions roughly in half, while also lowering methane emissions. However, further upscaling of MP, under the assumption of given consumer acceptance, results in a non-linear saturation effect on reduced deforestation and related CO emissions-an effect that cannot be captured with the method of static LCA.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04629-wDOI Listing

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