7

Among foods, beef is frequently noted as one of the biggest causes of global warming, particularly because cattle produce methane as part of their digestion. Cheese is less frequently discussed in this manner, despite also being produced from cows, presumably with the production of methane at similar amounts.

From the Wikipedia article on feed conversion ratio (FCR) it would appear that dairy cattle and beef cattle have about the same requirements for principal inputs. Is is possible to determine the relative or absolute impacts of these 2 foodstuffs?

Nic
  • 2,889
  • 1
  • 24
  • 47
Dave
  • 348
  • 1
  • 6
  • @Jan Doggen I have put in the definition of FCR. Do you think I should remove the paragraph "I can see 2 interpretations of this..."? I thought it clarified my thinking, but I shall remove it if that fits better. – Dave Aug 23 '19 at 08:24
  • @Maria I concentrated on cheese as it is most similar nutritionally to beef, I would expect the calculation to be similar for all dairy. – Dave Aug 23 '19 at 08:25
  • @Dave do you think sheep or goat's cheese is better? – atreeon Nov 19 '19 at 05:27
  • It seems that FCR is a mass ratio. Dry mass or wet? I suspect dry, in the case of dairy, but is the same adjustment made for meat? A better calculation would be a per-calorie figure. Also, but removing the lactose, you're aiming it has no value in by-products. I'm not sure that's true – Chris H Nov 19 '19 at 08:11
  • Dave, I simplified your question by removing the parts that also tried to answer the question; hopefully this helps to bring in more responses. If you want to preserve your hypothesis, you might want to post it as an answer here. – Nic Nov 29 '19 at 02:30