Carbon Dividends on the agenda at the BIG Conference
Carbon dividends (a.k.a Shares) will be on the agenda at the BIG Conference sponsored by the U.S. Basic Income Guarantee (USBIG) at the Fort Mason Center for Arts &
The goal of Diet Share is to reduce the environmental impact livestock raised for meat has on the environment by setting a limit (or cap) on meat-based protein consumption within a jurisdiction.
Diet Share may also result in positive health outcomes in communities, and may be aligned with some goals of animal rights organizations.
Dear meat eaters: Don’t be alarmed. You can still eat meat. You will just have to pay an additional cost for the environmental impact that it is causing. We all have to work together to solve these large-scale, planetary problems. You don’t have to change your personal eating habits, but you will have to take responsibility for additional impacts if they are above the average amount in your jurisdiction, and your demand for this scarce resource will help contribute to solving these problems in an equitable way.
Diet Share is a tradable “Cap & Share for Meat Consumption” program that can help jurisdictions reduce the amount of animal protein consumed, and assist in transitioning diets to more plant-based protein sources. The program is meant to assist jurisdictions in achieving reduction in per capita meat consumption. The program is sensitive to the personal choices, and traditional and religious customs regarding meat consumption, and is designed to be flexible, especially compared to an outright ban on animal-protein consumption. It cannot solve all other issues regarding the ethical issues of meat production or animal cruelty, but it can help educate households about the relative environmental impact of food choices, while providing economic incentives that support choosing plant-based protein consumption.
The principle behind Diet Share is that the resources for protein production are not valued correctly in the existing market system. The resources that go into food production are a commons that belongs to all of us, and if the supply of this commons becomes limited, then the value that accrues should be shared by everyone, equally. Diet Share treats the amount of animal-based protein as a limited global resource constrained by the climate impacts of meat production. This resource must be shared among the population equally, allowing people who eat less animal products to gain monetary compensation from others who desire more than their per capita share.
Households are provided a base allocation to cover their needs. Those who exceed their protein allocation must buy shares from those who use less.
As a baseline for discussion, Americans consumed almost 202 pounds of meat per person in 2014. Would your jurisdiction seek to reduce that amount by 10% in 10 years? 20%?
The average person in the industrialized world eats more than 176 lb. of meat annually, compared with around 66 lb. consumed by the average resident of the developing world.
Global average meat consumption is currently 100g per person per day, with about a ten-fold variation between high-consuming and low-consuming populations.
In 2015, there were about 30 million beef cows in the United States, and about 1.4 billion cows (including dairy cows) in the world.
A Diet Share program can help your jurisdiction:
According to recent studies: “Animal agriculture emits more (greenhouse gas emissions) than all transportation combined. Reducing demand for animal-based foods is essential if we are to limit global warming to 2C as agreed at COP21.”
Half of American adults have one or more preventable chronic diseases and over two-thirds of the adult population and one-third of children are overweight or obese.
Denmark considers meat tax in 2016.
The New York Times 3-17-18: The Case for a Carbon Tax on Beef
How can 9 billion people get protein without destroying the environment?
Guardian 12-11-17: Meat tax ‘inevitable’ to beat climate and health crises, says report.
Center for Global Development blog: America’s Love Affair with Meat: It’s Not Just about Us
Bustle.com 3-24-16: The Single Biggest Thing You Can Do For the Environment
Vox 6-13-16: Study: Going vegetarian can cut your food carbon footprint in half
Grain.org: Big meat and dairy’s supersized climate footprint
Guardian 11-7-17: Big meat and big dairy’s climate emissions put Exxon Mobil to shame
EcoWatch: Greenhouse Gas Emission Giants: Why Tyson Foods Rivals Exxon
Simon Fairlie in the Guardian 4-21-17: Could a tax on meat help us save the planet?
The Commons Share Project grew out of an initial goal to encourage a carbon market that supports the public trust in the implementation of California’s AB32 with Cap and Share, and Cap and Dividend. It has been expanded to include other types of Shares, including Fuel Share, Water Share, Mile Share, Diet Share, and the newest addition, Flight Share.
Carbon dividends (a.k.a Shares) will be on the agenda at the BIG Conference sponsored by the U.S. Basic Income Guarantee (USBIG) at the Fort Mason Center for Arts &