Showing posts with label methane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label methane. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 January 2011

MALNUTRITION: Eating insects 'could cut greenhouse gas emissions'

Benjamin Kolb: 17 January 2011
Insects in a bowl Eating insects is common in many parts of the world: Flickr/katesheets

Dining on crickets, locusts, or even cockroaches, instead of cattle or pigs, could ease both food insecurity and climate change, according to researchers.
Insects caught in the wild are already eaten widely in the developing world. Now a study says that farming them on a large scale for food would damage the environment far less than equivalent livestock production.
Scientists compared emissions, by livestock and by insects, of the greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide, which have a greater warming effect than carbon dioxide. They also measured ammonia production, which harms the environment by acidifying soil and water.
They reared mealworms, locusts and crickets, all of which are consumed around the world, as well as sun beetles and cockroaches, which people do not eat, despite their potential as a protein source, while monitoring the amount of gas produced per kilogram of insect growth.
Compared to cattle, weight for weight, insects emitted 80 times less methane — a gas with 25 times more impact on global temperature levels than carbon dioxide.
And crickets produced 8–12 times less ammonia than pigs.
According to the study's lead author, Dennis Oonincx, an entomologist from Wageningen University in the Netherlands, 80 per cent of the world's population eats insects, particularly in the developing world.
"It's a normal part of the menu there," said Oonincx. "If you look at the mopane ['worm' or edible caterpillar] industry in Africa, it's a million dollar business."
Most of these insects are harvested live in the wild, so collection is subject to seasonal variation — they are only farmed in a few countries, he said.
Arnold van Huis, the paper's co-author and professor of tropical entomology at Wageningen University, helped formulate the Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO) policy on edible insects.
He said they are an "excellent food source ... that should be nurtured" and taken up as an alternative to cattle.
"I don't think we can continue eating beef like we did in the past and the FAO has already predicted that in 2050 it will become so expensive no-one [will be able to] pay for it any more."
In Kenya, Monica Ayieko, a family and consumer economist at Maseno University, is studying insect production but said the 'Westernisation' of diets could pose an obstacle to encouraging consumption.
A spokesperson for the International Livestock Research Institute, in Kenya, which published a paper last year on improving the carbon efficiency of cattle farming, said that it recognises the value of widening the use of nutritious insects in poor communities. But "no one solution — livestock or otherwise — is going to provide sufficient food and do so sustainably".
http://www.scidev.net/en/news/eating-insects-could-cut-greenhouse-gas-emissions-.html

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

POVERTY: UGANDA: Rubbish revives Mbale region

 Photo: Charles Akena : Turning garbage into fertilizer

MBALE, 11 January 2011 (IRIN) - A compost-processing plant in Mbale, along the hilly slopes of the Mt. Elgon region in Uganda, is helping to boost declining crop yields through organic farming and aiding environmental conservation by cutting back on greenhouse gas emissions.
"Here we are turning garbage into fertilizer instead of leaving it to rot, emitting methane," Rhoda Nyaribi, an officer at the project, told IRIN.
Rubbish, Nyaribi said, is a big contributor of methane gas emissions. Methane traps heat in the atmosphere, warming the Earth's surface. Human activities such as farming and other land-use changes supplement the natural levels of these gases.
The Mbale plant, which is funded by the World Bank and managed by the Uganda National Environment Management Authority, under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), is helping to provide cheaper fertilizer - about 15 to 20 tonnes per day - to farmers.
The CDM allows developed countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions more cheaply by financing emission-reduction projects in developing countries, where costs are lower.
A kilogramme of the dry compost manure sold at the plant costs 100 Ugandan shillings (about US$0.04) compared with USh3,000 ($1.30) for a 500ml foliar fertilizer spray.
Farmers come from as far as northern Uganda to buy the manure, said Nyaribi, adding that the sales help sustain the project.
Improved fertilizer availability is expected to boost food production in areas where crop yields have been adversely affected by declining soil fertility.
The Nabika Village, in Mbale, is one such place, according to 65-year-old farmer, Wasagani Wambale.
Wambale says his two-hectare field is now producing half the banana, potato, tomato and onion crops it did in the past.
"This place [Nabika] was wonderful. I could harvest 150 bunches of bananas on average from each hectare but in the late 1990s my crop yield started falling," he told IRIN.
"The banana quality got bad; the suckers starting growing stunted and even the vegetables didn’t do well."
In the past, his crop earned him on average USh300,000 (about $140).
Agriculture and environmental officials attribute the poor yields to, among other causes, deforestation, which, spurred by a rising population, has exposed the fertile top soils to erosion.
Field terracing and the use of manure and compost as well as crop rotation are being encouraged.
"This is the best way farmers can sustain their production," said Joseph Wesuya, an official with the African Development Initiative, a community-based environmental conservation organization.
According to Bernard Mujasi, a Mbale District official, the compost project, established in January 2010, is also helping to clean up Mbale Town.
"We have lorries collecting [organic] garbage in the town and market places. This garbage is taken to the compost plant for producing the compost fertilizers," said Mujasi.
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=91602