Grazed perennial grasslands can match current beef production while contributing to climate mitigation and adaptation

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Abstract

The U.S. grain-finished beef system is highly productive but has many negative consequences for human health and well-being because it pollutes surface and groundwaters, exacerbates flooding, reduces biodiversity, and contributes to climate change. Moving the entire U.S. grain-fed beef production system to a grass-finished system is possible without displacing food production and under conservative soil carbon (C) change estimates would result in a reduced but similar C footprint, while improving soil health, water quality, and biodiversity. More optimistic estimates for soil C accumulation indicate the system would result in significant atmospheric C drawdown. Agroecological transformation like this is limited only by our imagination and policies that incentivize agriculture for the public good rather than profits for a few.

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APA

Jackson, R. D. (2022). Grazed perennial grasslands can match current beef production while contributing to climate mitigation and adaptation. Agricultural and Environmental Letters. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1002/ael2.20059

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