back to article UK milk wastage = 20,000 cars = actually completely unimportant

A scientific paper written with the aim of highlighting nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions has resulted in a crop of foolish headlines pointing out that the UK's waste of milk creates an environmental burden equivalent to having another 20,000 cars on the roads. To anyone with even a basic grasp on numbers - someone aware, let us …

COMMENTS

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  1. Tom 7

    I bet you'd notice 20,000 cars in central london

    and you could charge the cows congestion charge too!

  2. Tom Wood

    So, if I drink MORE milk

    less will be wasted?

    1. theblackhand
      Thumb Up

      Re: So, if I drink MORE milk

      No, no, no

      It's the milk at the bottom of the bottle that is being wasted, so you should tip out the amount that you are thinking of wasting from the top of the bottle to reduce CO2.

  3. seustice
    Mushroom

    Noxious Gases

    Surely encouraging the consumption of vegetables can only add to the release of noxious gases into the atmosphere.

    1. Darryl
      Boffin

      Re: Noxious Gases

      My thoughts exactly! In fact, I think we should go a step further and ban Brussels sprouts completely. That would probably reduce humans' direct greenhouse gas emissions by 50%

      1. Omgwtfbbqtime
        Alert

        Re: Noxious Gases

        You'd have far more effect if you banned wheat in all it's forms.

        Here's a challenge for those who discount this (do not do this if you have coeliac disease or other gluten intolerance!):

        For the next week ensure you eat 6 slices of bread/servings of pasta per day (replacing your normal carb not supplementing it).

        Note how gassy and bloated you are and how much you stink.

        Then for the following week cut out all wheat - eat fruit veg and meat, even beans and brussels if you like, hell even a vindaloo.

        Note how much better it is without wheat.

        (Note: I am a coeliac - diagnosed in late 30s, I noticed the difference in my ahem "output" on giving up wheat, more importantly so did the Missus).

        1. Omgwtfbbqtime
          WTF?

          A down vote?

          With no comment?

          Must be a veggie, or a wheat farmer, or someone in the processed food industry.

          Either that or it's a frothinggreenie who has followed me from a climate change forum article.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: A down vote?

            I'm guessing you were downvoted for suggesting people should eat 6 servings of pasta a day to prove that wheat is the source of all their digestive troubles. If you eat large enough amounts of any one thing of course it's going to produce a negative effect.

            1. Omgwtfbbqtime
              Pint

              Re: A down vote?

              Hey if you're going to eat any amount of phytates(such as gluten) it's going to have a negative effect on your gut regardless of any gluten intolerance.

              The gas comes from the fermentable starches in the wheat.

              beer because that contains nordein - the barley equivalent of gluten.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: A down vote?

            A down vote and a comment. Thank you for sharing your illness and anecdote with us. I find that I also get headaches if I drink six litres of wine a day,

            1. Omgwtfbbqtime
              Happy

              Re: A down vote?

              6 Litres in a day?

              I'd say the hangover was the least of your issues.

              Have you considered getting medical help?

        2. Dodgy Geezer Silver badge
          Mushroom

          Re: Noxious Gases

          "...For the next week ensure you eat 6 slices of bread/servings of pasta per day (replacing your normal carb not supplementing it). Note how gassy and bloated you are and how much you stink..."

          That's nothing! I happen to like figs and prunes. Every so often I have a binge on them, and you wouldn't want to live downwind of me for the next few days...

          But I'm not going to change my eating habits because of this. More importantly, I'm not going to change my eating (or any other) habit because of global warming scares (which are complete lies) or health scares (which are mainly complete lies)....

          Icon for obvious reasons...

        3. Ignazio
          Alert

          Re: Noxious Gases

          Have you considered it had such an effect on you because you're coeliac? You know, like lactose intolerants who will fart if they eat cheese?

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Trollface

    So...

    If we eat more Cows there'd be less milk to wast (and less Bovine Flatulence)...

    MuckDonalds here I come...

    1. Graham Dawson Silver badge

      Re: So...

      If you want to eat more cows you're going to the wrong place there, matey.

      1. Richard 12 Silver badge
        Coat

        Re: So...

        MuckyD's is where you go if you want to eat more of the cow.

        All that lovely mechanically-reclaimed "beef product"....

        1. Tony S

          Re: So...

          Just to clarify - I used to work for a supplier of meat that went to the manufacturer of McDonalds burgers in the UK. We provided about 20% of their total intake of beef each year.

          None of the meat supplied was mechanically recovered. It was all of two varieties; 75% VL and 85% VL (VL = Visually Lean). This mostly came from the forequarter (flank, neck and upper shin) and was usually in quite large pieces; very few were less than a kg in size. The meat was placed in large containers that were 1 cubic metre, and we shipped 12 - 18 of these, 3 - 4 times a week.

          The meat concerned was a really high quality product; it all came from beef animals (no milk cows) that were less than 18 months old at time of slaughter. In all cases, we had access to their complete life history, feed regime, innoculations etc. and even had information of the sire and dam going back 3 generations.

          (Of course, I have no way of knowing what they did after...)

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

    "What Dr Reay and his colleagues are actually suggesting here is the old eco-activism line that people should become more vegetarian, as meat and dairy products are deemed to be more carbon-intensive than a hearty diet of veg".

    It makes more sense to confront the problem of population growth directly, since it will only get worse every day we go on ignoring it. As for the vegetarians, they should perhaps take a look at John Nicholson's popular and thought-provoking book, "The Meat Fix: How a Lifetime of Healthy Eating Nearly Killed Me". http://tinyurl.com/8xve96z

    Or read up on the scientific facts in Gary Taubes' magnificent "The Diet Delusion" (published in the USA as "Good Calories, Bad Calories"). http://tinyurl.com/7un7ey4

    1. Steve Crook

      Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

      They are, and they aren't. The truth is, that as time passes we find better more efficient ways of doing things, and as standards of living increase worldwide, the rate of population increase will decline.

      You say "Confront the problem of population growth directly". How? Mandatory contraception? One child policies? Forced sterilisation? Forced food and other resource rationing?

      Malthus wasn't right, and I'm not convinced that his intellectual descendants are right either. If we produced food and consumed resources with the same efficiency as in Malthus times, he'd probably have been right, but we don't and he wasn't. That's progress, being able to do more with less.

      1. Scott Broukell
        Megaphone

        Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

        A Start to Confronting the Problem of Population Growth might be:

        NO child benefit after the second child is born.(Medical exemptions for multiple births of course)

        That way it's like a tax on children. Those who can afford it will be able to choose weather to absorb the extra financial burden themselves, and those that would otherwise expect the state to pay for their large families will need to revise their thinking and way of life. Who knows, with smaller families, the less well off might find that one or two kids actually prosper a wee bit better that 4 or 5+

        And NO state-funded fertility treatment either - it's natures own way of controlling birth rates don't yer know.

        Of course this would open a debate as to weather couples who choose not to have children should be rewarded in some small way ?

        The overall savings on the government purse might not be that large, but, for example, the reduction in class sizes is there to benefit all.

        Just thinking about efficiency savings, austerity and living within our means etc.

        There would be less milk wastage as well.

        1. John H Woods Silver badge

          Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

          "No child benefit after second child - that way it's like a tax on children."

          Errm, children are FUCKING expensive anyway, they do not need to be taxed. Couples who choose not to have children are rewarded not only 'in some way' but ENORMOUSLY due to - guess what - not having to pay for children (xkcd 946).

          If you were correct in your cause and effect wealthier people would have more children than poorer people, and that isn't what happens. Making the poorest poorer will not stop them having more children. Looking after children properly, educating them properly and making them productive members of society is what we need to focus on.

          Remember your 'reduction in class sizes', even if it were to happen, is a reduction in the number of people who will be able to pay for you - pension, healthcare etc - when you are older.

          1. Scott Broukell

            Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

            I don't want to have loads of disadvantaged, poorly educated, children running about the place paying (somehow) for my state pension and healthcare thanks very much. I want to be able to do that for myself thank you. I want all children to get better educational opportunities and to have those from disadvantaged backgrounds better able to get themselves out of said disadvantaged predicament. Education certainly is a very key factor in reducing world population rates - e.g. by dint of allowing female children an opportunity to rid themselves of cultural and religious straight jackets that otherwise see them repeating the birthing machine lifestyles that their mothers and grandmothers suffered.

            It matters little if wealthier folk have more children or not. What matters is having a stable, sustainable population which can do more for ITSELF and not burden the state / tax payers. Who need the money to fund their private healthcare and private pensions etc.

            1. veti Silver badge
              Pirate

              Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

              You want to "pay for" your state pension and healthcare yourself - only because you haven't thought about what "paying for them" means.

              It's not about the money you put aside now, it's about who's actually going to do the work. When you're in a nursing home and you fall out of bed in the middle of the night and press your alarm button, you can be as rich as you like but it won't help if there's *nobody to monitor the alarm*.

              More mundanely, if you go down the pub to enjoy a nice game of dominoes with your fellow retirees, you'd probably like the pub to be able to sell you a pint of beer. That means somebody has to be still working, making and distributing beer.

              That's why you're going to be dependent on the younger generation, no matter how much you "pay for" your own retirement.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

            Yes, there is a reduction in the number of people to pay for us when we're older. If you don't deal with it now by cutting population, you're just making a bigger problem for the future.

            And I'm puzzled by the argument that we shouldn't cut child benefit because people have children regardless. Government taxes an awful lot of things to reduce consumption. Either fiscal penalties on behaviour work, or they don't. If they work, then cutting child benefit will reduce the number of children people have. If they don't, then we can scrap those 'sin taxes' as ineffective in altering behaviour.

        2. B Bunter
          Childcatcher

          Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

          Hm.. 1 child per couple. Way to go there, dont you know that pension schemes are pyramid schemes?

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

        Efficiency improvements don't eliminate the problem. They just delay the inevitable. Doing more with less is all very well, but agriculture will never become more than 100% efficient.

        Can the planet support a larger population with anything like the living standards that people reasonably aspire to? Probably not, and since there is no advantage in finding out, why bother? Soil erosion is likely to increase with population and reduce the potential for food production. The availability of fresh water is another concern. In the end, over-population is a problem that solves itself, but it won't be pretty.

      3. Nuke
        FAIL

        @Steve Crook Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

        Steve Crook wrote :- "The truth is, that as time passes we find better more efficient ways of doing things, and as standards of living increase worldwide, the rate of population increase will decline."

        That needs framing as a fine example of a pious hope. Having lots of kids is, in some cultures, enshrined as something to be proud of. Better standards of living would merely enable even more kids. Osama bin Laden's father did not have 56 (or whatever) kids because he was hard-up.

        Finding (if we can) more efficient ways of doing things does not necessarily even keep up with the population increase.

        For example, copper is running short. There is not enough to go round the population (esp as it is also dumped in landfill as time goes on), so as the population increases aluminium is increasingly used for electrical conductors. Aluminium has greater electrical resistance than copper - so less efficiency there.

        You say "Confront the problem of population growth directly". How? Mandatory contraception? One child policies? Forced sterilisation?" As time goes on, such measures may be the only alternative to mass extinction.

        1. Steve Crook
          FAIL

          Re: @Steve Crook Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

          @nuke. Pious hope? At least I don't use a apparent 'moral imperative' to justify a Stalinist/Pol Pot state. Given what you're proposing I wonder if mass extinction might not be preferable if that's really the best that we can do.

        2. Dodgy Geezer Silver badge
          Alert

          Re: @Steve Crook Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

          @nuke

          you say - " That needs framing as a fine example of a pious hope. Having lots of kids is, in some cultures, enshrined as something to be proud of.

          Finding (if we can) more efficient ways of doing things does not necessarily even keep up with the population increase. For example, copper is running short. There is not enough to go round the population (esp as it is also dumped in landfill as time goes on), so as the population increases aluminium is increasingly used for electrical conductors. Aluminium has greater electrical resistance than copper - so less efficiency there...."

          Um. The drop in childbirth rate is so well documented as to hardly need further comment. Implying that it just won't happen is hardly a debating point.

          And implying that we are running out of raw materials was completely disproven way back in the 1960s, with the famous Simon-Ehrlich wager. You know why aluminium is used for pylon cables - lower in weight for equivalent performance to copper, and much lower in cost.

          All in all, you sound like a 1970s environmental activist trying to restart the 'Population Bomb' meme and make money out of the resultant panic. The world has moved on....

      4. A J Stiles
        Stop

        Confronting the problem of population growth directly

        Well, bribing people to remain child-free would be a reasonable start.

        If you wait long enough, people tend to die all by themselves. You just have to make that sure new ones aren't being born at the same rate as the old ones are dying, and the population decreases all by itself.

        1. Intractable Potsherd

          Re: Confronting the problem of population growth directly

          Unfortunately, forced population reduction has a name - war. Whether that is how it starts or not, it is how it will end, and the results are he same - death, destruction, and disruption of society.

    2. h4rm0ny

      Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

      "As for the vegetarians..."

      Unfortunately, whilst I frequently agree with Lewis on the environment, he does not apparently know what a vegetarian is. Vegans are the ones who don't drink milk. Vegetarians don't eat meat. Vegans are a stricter sub-set of vegetarians.

      As to your link, statistically vegetarians are slimmer and healthier when you adjust for all other factors. Someone wrote a book saying his Irritable Bowel Syndrom cleared up when he stopped being vegetarian. Oddly enough, there are millions of vegetarians who don't have such conditions and whose health is fine. Science - I don't think your link is it...

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Unfortunately, the facts are otherwise

        "...statistically vegetarians are slimmer and healthier when you adjust for all other factors".

        Er, says who? I notice a startling lack of evidence in your assertion. Although, logically, strict vegetarians are likely to be very thin because it's hard to get enough calories from such a diet. The lack of other nutrients will not make itself known so quickly.

        "Science - I don't think your link is it..."

        Actually, "The Diet Delusion" is exactly that. It is nothing more nor less than an objective survey of the scientific research done on the subject of nutrition and obesity since the early 19th century. Turns out that recently a lot of senior scientists have been telling us more or less the opposite of what their own research proved - not a very good recommendation for the scientific method, or rather a demonstration that wishful thinking and self-interest beat regard for truth hands down most of the time.

  6. Nick Ryan Silver badge
    Joke

    It's those damn cows driving around in cars that are the real problem here.

  7. This post has been deleted by its author

  8. Alfred

    Something missing from this analysis, surely?

    What, no examination of whether we'd be better of abandoning EuroMilk and just buying cheap from the US?

    1. RainForestGuppy

      Re: Something missing from this analysis, surely?

      US milk is cheaper and far superior**. In fact all the milk waste is caused by BAE who are forcing to UK government to buy inferior british milk and then pouring it away.

      **Of course ignoring half the facts just to prove your point.

    2. dogged
      Stop

      Re: Something missing from this analysis, surely?

      At least a part of the problem is caused by EuroMilk™.

      Britain has a quota on how much milk it is permitted to produce. That quota is set artificially low in order to ensure that France, the Netherlands and other exporters of milk have a guaranteed market to export to. The UK is about 48% self-sufficient in milk, down from 100% in 1971.

      Cows are not machines. It doesn't work like "insert nKg of fodder and o litres of water to produce %FIXED_VOLUME of milk". Some days, you get more milk, some days you get less. In the spring, you usually get more. In the winter, a little less.

      If you routinely produce less mil;k than you have quota for, DEFRA will take your quota away. If you ever produce more milk than you have quota for, DEFRA will fine you for each extra litre. It is imperative that the British public continue to buy foreign milk, so you can see why they do this (?).

      Thus, you keep enough cattle to maintain your quota in the winter. So that you don't lose it. In the spring, you throw milk away in order to avoid paying DEFRA's fines.

      If you want to stop wasting milk, withdraw from the Common Agricultural Policy.

      1. Richard 12 Silver badge
        FAIL

        Re: Something missing from this analysis, surely?

        The CAP is a truly insane little treaty, with a great many examples of this kind of stupid waste.

        It really does need to be completely abandoned, as although there probably are some good parts, they're lost in the mire.

        It's what happens when you put a load of politicians together and tell them to solve the problem of food production - they invent a bureaucracy and give it the most complex rules they can come up with, forcing farmers to game the system in order to make a living.

        Then as soon as they do that, the rules are changed to stop that particular way of gaming it, some farmers go bust and the rest have to find another way.

    3. Zot

      Re: Something missing from this analysis, surely?

      I wonder how much more steroids, antibiotics and oestrogen US cows have pumped into them than ours?

      1. dogged

        @Zot

        Exactly 100% more, excepting antibiotics which cannot be administered to cattle currently being milked in the UK.

        However, if we consider US standards to be 100% and UK standard to be 0%, you'll find that Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands sit at around 35-40%.

        Meaning you drink that stuff anyway.

        Sorry about that.

        1. MJI Silver badge

          Re: @Zot

          Am I the only person who tries to make sure their milk is British?

          1. dogged

            Re: @MJI

            You're not. You're making sure that your milk is bottled/packaged in the UK. It is illegal to advertize milk by producing nation, provided that nation is an EU member.

            So unless you buy it from a farmer - and I think that's now also illegal - your milk is exactly the same as everyone else's.

            1. Alfie Noakes

              Re: @MJI

              @dogged

              "You're not. You're making sure that your milk is bottled/packaged in the UK. It is illegal to advertize milk by producing nation, provided that nation is an EU member."

              So why does my bottle of "Duchy Originals from Waitrose" milk say "Produced by a small group of West Country farmers in Devon, Dorset and Somerset, chosen for their high standards of animal welfare"??

              1. dogged

                Re: @MJI

                To be honest, I don't know. My dad was a dairy farmer. He died a few years ago. Since then, I haven't kept up with developments so it's possible that either a) I'm behind the times or b) Prince Charles is exempt.

            2. MJI Silver badge

              Re: @MJI

              We get most from a farm which does its own bottling and sales, and sold through various farm shps.

  9. DJV Silver badge
    Happy

    It's Monday...

    I read a bit of the first para as:

    UK's waste of milk crates

    ...and wondered what the hell was going on. Time to wake up!

  10. MJI Silver badge

    Food waste

    You mean people can afford to waste food?

    We can't - we buy it we eat ir

  11. Tony S
    Flame

    Soapbox time.

    "Eating less meat and wasting less food can play a big part in helping to keep a lid on greenhouse gas emissions as the world's population increases," asserts Reay.

    Here's the thing; for a very large proportion (about 40% to 50%) of the world's population, there is little choice - meat is just too expensive to eat and the people rely upon grains or pulses for their diet. Those same people won't throw ANY food away, because even if it is totally rotten, it will still be better than the alternative (which for the hard of thinking is starvation).

    Those of us in the Western World have the option to buy whatever we want, at any time of year, as we have access to food at a reasonable cost through supermarkets that encourage us to buy large quantities, and obscene amounts of this then end up in landfill. I've said this before, but I am sometimes embarrassed at the amount of food produced that is wasted compared to what some people in the third world actually get to eat.

    On one occasion when I was on holiday abroad in a third world country , I spent some time haggling with a shop keeper (spent quite a bit of money but really tied him down on price). Afterwards, he invited me to his house eat with his family; I couldn't refuse as this would have been an insult in that culture.

    His wife was delightful, and his children were incredible; the food was really well prepared, but it was a basic salad with some rice, and the amount each had was reduced because I was their guest. Each plate had about two thirds the amount of a normal plateful full that I would have prepared. I felt awful as I was literally taking food out of the mouths of the children. (I went back the next day with some bags of sweets which I gave to the shop keeper as a thank you for the children).

    I have no issue with people eating well; i just think that people in the west don't realise just how damn lucky we are. As the world's population increases, we may one day find that we are in a position where we simply cannot afford to buy meat.

    I grew up in the period just after the war, and even if rationing had ended, there was still a culture of being careful about what you ate and especially what you threw away. Perhaps we should return to being a little more sensible about what we eat.

    /soapbox

    1. NomNomNom

      Re: Soapbox time.

      " (I went back the next day with some bags of sweets which I gave to the shop keeper as a thank you for the children)."

      Oh great now he has to buy toothbrushes and toothpaste for his kids

      1. Tony S

        Re: Soapbox time.

        I'm disappointed that people didn't see the humour in your reply - I thought that it was quite funny. Oh well...

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Soapbox time.

      If more people opened their eyes and looked at the bigger picture, I'd hope they would see the same as you saw. Perhaps they would respect and value what they had all the more.

    3. Andrew Moore

      Re: Soapbox time.

      I would not feel too bad about partaking in that meal as the money you had spent with the father ensured the survival of the whole family.

      Contrast that with the story my mother told me of growing up in rural Ireland in the 40s, in a large family. Everyone used to dread the priest turning up because he always did so for Sunday dinner and got the best of the food and usually seconds too. After he left, the children got to eat whatever was left.

      1. Jason Bloomberg Silver badge
        WTF?

        Re: Soapbox time.

        "Everyone used to dread the priest turning up because he always did so for Sunday dinner and got the best of the food and usually seconds too. After he left, the children got to eat whatever was left."

        A simple "feck off" would seem to be in order there.

        I am intrigued as to why people felt obliged or chose to provide for the priest ahead of their families and not have the courage to say "no" and tell him how it is.

        I can only guess it was some existential threat like excommunication, hell and damnation, or misplaced peer pressure (and threat of being outcast) from everyone who was equally in the same boat but decided if they had to it so did everyone else.

        1. NomNomNom

          Re: Soapbox time.

          Maybe the priest got to eat first because the children weren't allowed in the same room as the priest.

  12. GarethJones
    Alert

    As with all these Eco stories...

    ...I always think the same thing, civilisations come and go, so do species.

    When it's our time, it's our time!.

    All this wishful thinking about man being able to halt an ice age reminds me of King Canute trying to hold back the tide, pointless and above all arrogant.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: As with all these Eco stories...

      Whereas it makes me think we just need to hurry up and get off this rock.

      In ancient times we used caves as natural shelter because we couldn't build houses. Now we live in houses but use the atmosphere and magnetosphere of one convenient planet as a natural shelter because we can't build habitats off-world.

    2. Frumious Bandersnatch

      Re: As with all these Eco stories...

      reminds me of King Canute trying to hold back the tide, pointless and above all arrogant.

      Except that Canute most likely did it to prove a point (that he did not have the power to command the tides), and not out of arrogance or power-drunk madness. From the wiki page:

      It is believed that, on this site, Cnut tried to command the tide of the river to prove to his courtiers that they were fools to think that he could command the waves.

      1. GarethJones

        Re: As with all these Eco stories...

        Oh I see, I stand corrected.

        So all these Eco types, shouting from the rooftops to reuse toilet paper as it's saves the environment, are actually doing so to prove to the opposite. Well that does make more sense of the whole thing.

        /Sarcasm

    3. NomNomNom

      Re: As with all these Eco stories...

      that's exactly how I deny the holocaust.

      How could the holocaust have happened when King Canute couldn't even hold back the tide?

      1. Crisp
        FAIL

        Re: How could the holocaust have happened when King Canute couldn't even hold back the tide?

        That's a total non-sequitur. The one has absolutely nothing to do with the other.

        1. This post has been deleted by its author

        2. NomNomNom

          Re: How could the holocaust have happened when King Canute couldn't even hold back the tide?

          "That's a total non-sequitur. The one has absolutely nothing to do with the other."

          All appeals to king canute are total non-sequiturs.

  13. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
    Mushroom

    MILK WASTAGE? HOW NOW, BROWN COW?

    Couple of years ago, euro-diary-producers were storming the barricades and in protest actions were spilling milk all over the place, demanding a "fair price" (i.e. a price increase) for a good that is subsidized, resulting in "social" prices (i.e. a price reduction) at the point to delivery and overproduction because there are too many producers, not to mention bad allocation of sparse resources like trucks, fuel, time and land.

    And people are talking about MILK WASTAGE?

  14. Thomas 18
    Facepalm

    CO2 is a technological problem

    and requires a technological solution. End of Line.

    1. NomNomNom

      Re: CO2 is a technological problem

      Eg a switch to nuclear and re-newables and an international ban on coal, shale gas and other alternative fossil fuel sources. Oil can keep going, it's going to run down soon enough anyway.

    2. Dodgy Geezer Silver badge
      Boffin

      Re: CO2 is a technological problem

      "CO2 is a technological problem and requires a technological solution."

      CO2 is NOT a problem and requires NO solution, technological or otherwise.

      There, fixed that for you...

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The same argument can be made for anything. "breathing makes more CO2!!!"

    Sadly, it's not a helpful one. People need to look at being less wasteful in general. Then looking to cut out obvious waste (this helps a business etc monetarily as well).

    Not that we do, or do not, have a reason to reduce CO2 emissions. But usually, if you are, you're also reduction your power bill.

    As to other gas productions, anything to reduce things to a closed system is helpful.

    1. Ross 7

      Ummm, *respiration* creates CO2, breathing is merely the physical process of shifting gases into and out of the lungs.

      To be fair to the (uni) guy meat is more energy expensive than veg - you're doing energy conversion and so it's inevitable. I'm not saying don't eat meat. Far from it. We're built to take advantage of both meat and veg (altho two of my friends disagree on the veg part). There's nothing wrong with reducing meat intake - it tends to be a dietary improvement for many ppl in the UK.

      The milk argument is a bit of a joke tho - as has been covered already it's a CAP problem. plain and simple. It's the same with all farming issues to be honest. If you punish ppl for overproduction they're going to bin the excess.

      The only realistic solution I can think of (and it's not necessarily legitimate) is to process the excess milk on-site (things like butter, cheese etc). You're not selling *milk*, so hopefully you'd avoid the DEFRA hammer.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Coat

        Sorry. I stand corrected. Just stop breathing for a moment, I am sure the respiration will continue as normal from there on. ;)

        I'll get me coat...

        1. Ross 7

          "Just stop breathing for a moment, I am sure the respiration will continue as normal from there on. ;)"

          1. You know when they do a lung transplant and the recipient doesn't die?

          2. You know when someone ingests CN and they *do* die?

          That's the difference. You can respire sans breathing. You can't do jack without respiring. It's an important distinction. If you're on bbc.co.uk you can probably get away with it. On a tech site like El Reg you can't really complain when the distinction is made :)

  16. Pete 2 Silver badge

    20,000 cars?

    Sorry, but unless the volume is expressed in olympic swimming pools I have no idea how much (or little) that is.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: 20,000 cars?

      It wasn't volume being discussed. It was equivalent CO2 emissions.

  17. Dr Insanity
    Joke

    Wasted Milk...

    why is everyone crying about it?

  18. localzuk Silver badge

    Hang on...

    So the author here is basically saying 'its such a little amount, what's the point?'. What if every factory said that about their emissions? Or every country? What if every person said that about leaving a light bulb on?

    Arguing that it is a tiny number and therefore doesn't matter is, to be honest, crass stupidity.

    1. TonyHoyle

      Re: Hang on...

      The average modern bulb tops out at 11w. Probably one of the most efficient items in your house. And light is somewhat necessary.

      Devices on standby rarely take more than a couple of watts, yet they're portrayed as the spawn of the devil.

      OTOH the TV - drawing 150-200w, is on for 12 hours a day, and is never mentioned.

      Of course the people telling you how bad standby is and how evil lightbulbs are? TV advertising execs. The *last* people that would want you to turn the TV off.

      1. Fibbles

        Re: Hang on...

        I think I'd be a lot more receptive to environmental campaigners if their pamphlets advocated switching the TV off for a few hours in the evening and going down the pub.

        They could even include helpful bullet points. By going to the pub you are reducing you carbon footprint by:

        - Congregating in a moodily lit rooms, thus reducing the amount of electricity required for lighting.

        - Staying in a reasonably close proximity to other people, sharing body heat and overall reducing the amount of energy used per person on heating.

        - Vastly reducing the number of TV's required per person (if the boozer even has one at all).

        - Consuming an energy rich liquid, thus reducing the need to farm less energy efficient foodstuffs.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      FAIL

      Re: Hang on...

      Ah, the old "every little counts" theory.

      Unfortunately, every little only counts if you concentrate that little in once place, so if everyone gave me a pound, then I would be fabulously wealthy. But at the end of the day, my fabulous wealth is still *nothing* compared to the world's economy.

    3. Intractable Potsherd
      Facepalm

      Re: Hang on...

      localzuk said: "What if every factory said that about their emissions? Or every country? What if every person said that about leaving a light bulb on?" Well, it depends what you are measuring. I take it you are referring to CO2, in which case, probably nothing. Other, genuinely dangerous, pollutants might increase. Smog might return. Rooms would get slightly warmer. The utility bill payer would get proportionately poorer. Insects might be attracted to the lights. Burglars might be deterred.

      How far do you want to go with this?

  19. Crisp
    Unhappy

    I can't do anything anymore!

    Can't drive a car. Can't drink milk. I can't even decompose without accruing a carbon debt.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Coat

      Re: I can't do anything anymore!

      Actually, if your 12 feet underground, it might help sequence some of the carbon.

      Don't worry though, if you look at it in what you eat, most carbon is in a closed system. You eat it, it goes back into the air, the plants soak it back up for you to eat again. It's the other bits like farming, transport etc that use the most fuel, cost and resources.

      Coat, because mine would be the one with the goat for my own milk on tap. :P

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re:12 feet?

        I don't have twelve feet and the ones I have are not underground.

        The process of locking up carbon to keep it out of the atmosphere is called sequestration. That is a different word to "sequencing".

  20. Circadian
    Devil

    Breathe...

    People need to breathe less to cut down on greenhouse gasses.

    "I've got a little list... who never would be missed!" (Not naming names, but... ah, who am I kidding ;-)

    1. A J Stiles

      Re: Breathe...

      Since human beings can't digest fossil fuels, every carbon atom in breath originally came from a plant or animal (which in turn got it from an animal or a plant); and every carbon atom in plants came from the atmosphere, by photosynthesis. Therefore, respiration is carbon-neutral: you are merely returning CO2 whence it originally came.

      1. Vladimir Plouzhnikov

        Re: Breathe...

        "Therefore, respiration is carbon-neutral"

        The whole Earth is carbon-neutral. All we are doing when we burn oil and coal is returning the carbon that was stored earlier by plants and dinosaurs back in circulation...

        1. A J Stiles

          Re: Breathe...

          Yes, but the thing is: the Earth had got quite used to all that carbon being *out* of the cycle.

          Now it's coming back into circulation, things are changing. And not necessarily for our benefit.

          1. Intractable Potsherd

            Re: Breathe...

            The Earth hadn't "got ... used to" anything. It is an insensate lump of rock with a gas envelope and some growths. It does not have the requisite equipment (consciousness) to "get used to" anything.

  21. Ben Norris
    Megaphone

    Lets put 20,000 milk trucks back on the road so that people get it fresh and don't waste so much :P

  22. JeffyPooh
    Pint

    Cars reduce nitrogen oxide (NOx)

    Modern petrol-powered cars produce essentially zero point zero zero zero... NOx emissions. The NOx emissions from modern cars might well be less than amibient. Thus, cars are saving the planet.

  23. Britt Johnston

    Percentages for comparison, please

    I can't follow the thread of the article enough to work out what percentage of milk is wasted. At a guess,a low one, as milk is probably turned to butter, cheese and yoghurt before it is thrown away.

    Now, 25% of water is wasted on the way to consumers. I believe and hope that the figure for petroleum fuels is considerably lower, in the ppm range. Which one should I compare the percentage milk loss to?

  24. Lost in Cyberspace

    Proof

    That statistics are whatever bollocks you want them to be.

  25. veti Silver badge
    Coat

    What's worse than 'Wings'?

    Answer: "Paul McCartney and the IPCC"

  26. Tankboy
    Meh

    You lost me

    At Paul McCartney. He has a dog in this fight? Christ on a crutch...

  27. Richard 84

    Why not develop

    milk-powered cars?

    1. Vladimir Plouzhnikov

      Re: Why not develop

      And call them "calves".

This topic is closed for new posts.