Livestock Methane Emissions
Ruminant livestock, especially cattle, but also sheep and goats, emit methane as a part of their digestion. It’s hard for animals to digest the fibre in grass, so ruminants rely on bacteria living in their stomachs to break it down into a form they can use. The bacteria make nutrients for the cattle, but some of them also produce methane as a byproduct. The cattle can’t use the methane, so they burp it out, and it contributes up to 32% of global methane emissions1!
Innovators are exploring various ways to reduce the amount of methane emitted by livestock. The main ways to do this are either to block the bacteria in their stomachs from producing methane or to shift the balance of bacteria towards those that produce less methane. The first breakthrough came when a team in Australia discovered that feeding Asparagopsis seaweed could reduce cattle methane emissions by over 90%. Since then, startups such as CH4 Global, Symbrosia, Sea Forest, and SeaStock have developed various formulations of Asparagopsis-based feed additives. The main active ingredient in the seaweed is a chemical called bromoform, so startups like Rumin8 are using bromoform directly in their formulations.
These additives work well for animals raised in feedlots, but grazing animals, which might not have a single consistent feeding site, need a long-lasting solution. Number 8 Bio has developed a non-bromoform compound that can be formulated to remain in an animal’s stomach, continuously reducing methane when cattle are out to pasture. ArkeaBio and Lucidome are working on vaccinating cattle against methane-producing bacteria, so that their bodies will naturally fight them off.
Other startups are working on masks that siphon off methane from cattle, developing probiotics to shift the balance of their microbiomes, or even breeding new types of cattle with lower emissions. Reducing agricultural emissions is critical to meeting our climate goals. As long as people continue to consume beef and dairy, it is essential to produce them in a lower-carbon way.
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