PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Changing patterns of meat consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in Australia: Will kangaroo meat make a difference?

  • Shyama Ratnasiri,
  • Jayatilleke Bandara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170130
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0170130

Abstract

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The Australian per capita consumption of ruminant meat such as beef and lamb has declined over the last two decades. Over the same period, however, per capita consumption of non-ruminant meat such as chicken and pork has continued to increase. Furthermore, it is now observed that the human consumption of kangaroo meat is on the rise. This study investigates the implications of these changes in meat consumption patterns on Green House Gases (GHGs) emission mitigation in Australia using a Vector Auto Regression (VAR) forecasting approach. Our results suggest that the increase will continue in non-ruminant meat consumption and this will not only offset the decline in ruminant meat consumption, but will also raise the overall per capita meat consumption by approximately 1% annually. The per capita GHGs emissions will likely decrease by approximately 2.3% per annum, due to the inclusion of non-ruminant meat in Australian diets. The GHGs emissions can further be reduced if the average Australian consumer partially replaces ruminant meat with kangaroo meat.