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Livestock Sector Honours Commitment to Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction

By Bruce Cochrane

The manager of sustainable development with Manitoba Pork says the global livestock sector is making good on its commitment to reduce its contribution to global warming.

Earlier this month the Paris based International Meat Secretariat reaffirmed its commitment to tackling climate change by focusing on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Mike Teillet, the Manager of Sustainable Development with Manitoba Pork, says while pork production contributes only a small fraction of global green gas production, the industry recognizes it is part of the problem and wants to be part of the solution.

Mike Teillet-Manitoba Pork:
A number of countries have been undertaking activities over the last 10 to 15 years or more to reduce pollution and greenhouse gas production as it relates to livestock.

Some of the techniques or initiatives the livestock sector has initiated would be better breeding and health programs.

This raises productivity and another way of putting that would be to say that you get more meat per pound of animal so you therefore have less greenhouse gases per animal.

There's better and more precise feeding techniques so you get less waste of feed and so on so that reduces the amount of greenhouse gases.
There's better manure management practices of course and the encouraging the use of biogas for energy production.

Teillet says Canada western Europe, including Germany, France, Holland and Denmark as well as Australia, Brazil, Columbia, New Zealand and the United States have all undertaken initiatives to reduce greenhouse emissions.

He notes the National Pork Board estimates American pork producers use 78 percent less land, 41 percent less water and release 35 percent less greenhouse gases per pound of pig produced today than 50 years ago and he expects the numbers would be similar in Canada.

Source: Farmscape


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In this episode of The Swine it Podcast Show Canada, Dr. Felipe Hickmann from Laval University explores how nutritional strategies and manure management impact biogas production in pig farming. He breaks down the science behind anaerobic digestion at low temperatures and explains how dietary adjustments affect methane production and environmental sustainability. Learn how producers can reduce emissions and improve resource efficiency. Listen now on all major platforms!

"Lowering crude protein can reduce nitrogen in manure, but only if animal intake doesn’t compensate by increasing feed consumption."

Meet the guest: Dr. Felipe Hickmann / felipe-hickmann-963853a6 is a PhD research assistant at Laval University, specializing in swine and poultry sustainability. With extensive experience in manure management, nutritional strategies, and precision livestock technologies, he contributes to improving environmental outcomes in animal agriculture.