Over the past decade, life cycle assessments (LCAs) have become essential as companies face increasing pressure to demonstrate the environmental impact of their products. Driven by the demand for transparency and stricter sustainability regulations, LCAs have become a critical tool for meeting product sustainability standards and green claims.
This trend is especially evident in the food industry, where novel products are emerging as sustainable alternatives to foods produced through traditional methods, such as animal-based agriculture, and LCAs provide a data-driven way of comparing the environmental performance of these new options.
Countless global LCAs conducted on food production demonstrate that animal-based agriculture creates profound environmental impacts, from greenhouse gas emissions, land use, water consumption, pollution and biodiversity loss. This article explores these impacts, and the far-reaching consequences of conventional food production.
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Animal agriculture contributes significantly to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, from animal feed, land use change and farming practices (e.g., manure management), to processing and transportation. Livestock production, particularly cattle, generates methane (CH₄) and nitrous oxide (N₂O), both potent greenhouse gases. Methane is produced during digestion in ruminants and from manure management, while nitrous oxide is released from manure and urine on pastures.1 Livestock accounts for approximately 14.5% of global GHGs,2 according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which rivals the emissions of some developed countries.
Land Use and Degradation
Producing animal-based foods requires extensive land use. Livestock farming occupies about 77% of global agricultural land yet provides only 18% of the world’s calories.1 This disproportionate land use leads to deforestation, habitat destruction and soil degradation. Forests are often cleared to create pastures or to grow feed crops, such as soy and corn, which exacerbates carbon emissions and reduces biodiversity.2 The conversion of forests to agricultural land is a major driver of deforestation in regions like the Amazon rainforest.
Water Consumption
Animal agriculture is also a major consumer of water resources. Producing animal-based foods typically requires more water than producing plant-based foods. For instance, 5,605 liters of water are required to produce 1 kg of cheese, compared to only 648 liters per kg of wheat.3 This high-water footprint is due to the water needed for feed crop irrigation, animal drinking, cleaning animal waste and processing. In many regions, this affects the availability of water for other uses and can contribute to water scarcity in regions either with limited water resources, competing water demands, or both.