In the United States, farming and ranching families are less than 2% of the population, and due to our practices which are based on science, each farmer feeds 166 people worldwide; more than any country https://www.fb.org/newsroom/fast-facts. In 2021, even with widespread inflation, U.S. consumers only spent 10.3% of their disposable personal income on food, with 5.2% being spent on food prepared away from home and 5.1% being prepared at home. In contrast, in 1960, 17% of Americans disposable income was spent on food https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/ag-and-food-statistics-charting-the-essentials/food-prices-and-spending/?topicId=2b168260-a717-4708-a264-cb354e815c67. Increased food production efficiency accounts for this improvement. The low percent of disposable income in the U.S. stands in stark contrast with other countries, many of which spend more than 40% of their household income on food including: Nigeria (58.9%), Kenya (52.2%), Cameroon (45.5%), Kazakhstan (42.8%), Philippines (41.9%), and Pakistan (41.9%). As a result, Americans enjoy a higher standard of living, because we have money left for things other than food and housing. We have a lot to be thankful for, much of it due to these unsung benefits of our agricultural productivity.
Activists often criticize animal production as competing directly with humans for food crops; however, most people do not realize that over 40% of the feeds we use for livestock production are byproducts of other industries. For instance, 45% of our U.S. corn crop now goes to ethanol production https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/crops/corn-and-other-feedgrains/feedgrains-sector-at-a-glance/#:~:text=Much%20of%20this%20growth%20in,percent%20of%20total%20corn%20 so that our vehicles can be driven with less nitrous oxide production. Ethanol production leaves 32 million (M) tons of dried distiller’s grains as a waste product, but these are high in fiber and protein. The beef industry uses 13.9 M tons, while dairy production utilizes 7.9 M tons, broiler chickens use 2.8 M tons, egg laying hens consume 1.6 M tons, and pigs eat more than 4.5 M tons. Soy oil is also produced by soybean processing, which produces another byproduct high protein feed, soybean meal and soyhulls which are a great source of fiber (cellulose) which can only be digested by ruminant animals. Each year, beef and dairy cattle consume almost 3.8 M tons of soyhulls; and cattle eat more than 3.4 M tons of soybean meal, whereas chicken production consumes 20 M tons, and pigs use more than 7 M tons. Cotton production produces a byproduct (cottonseed) of which more than 3.2 M tons are fed to beef and dairy cattle. High-fructose corn syrup production leaves behind byproducts as corn gluten feed and corn gluten meal, which are both high protein and high fiber byproduct feeds of which more than 5 M tons are fed. Many other byproducts from many industries, such as potato peels, with the beef industry using more than 437,000 tons https://www.afia.org/feedfacts/feed-industry-stats/animal-food-consumption/. The impression that all feeds used in modern animal production practices are grown solely for animals, and takes food away from humans is simply incorrect. If vegetable crop production were more profitable and feasible from the standpoints of production requirements, climate and soil in a geographic area, herbicide and pesticide usage, equipment requirements, and labor availability, then farmers would switch their production to those crops. In fact, more than 900 feedstuffs are used in both food animal and companion animal (dog and cat) diets, many of which are byproducts of other industries, and the use of these feeds by animals makes our entire food and energy systems more efficient, reduces the waste stream reaching landfills, and improves sustainability. This should be seen as a positive impact on society.
The U.S. EPA estimates that 27% of greenhouse gases (GHG) come from transportation, 25% from electric power, 24% from industrial production, 13% from residential and commercial sources, and 11% from all of agriculture (including field crops, vegetable, and fruit production) https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/sources-greenhouse-gas-emissions. However, beef and dairy cattle, and all other ruminants account for just 3.9% of all greenhouse gases produced in the United States, and Dr. Frank Mitloehner from U.C. Davis found that beef cattle accounted for just 2% of direct emissions https://www.ucdavis.edu/food/news/making-cattle-more-sustainable. In 2020, the U.S. EPA reported that 7% of greenhouse gas production was nitrous oxide and methane was 11%. However, even though we don’t hear this on the news, methane comes from sources other than agriculture including the production and transport of coal, natural gas, and oil, and by the decay of organic waste in municipal solid waste landfills (Source: https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/overview-greenhouse-gases). Another underreported fact is that nitrous oxide is 265 times more potent than carbon dioxide, CO2, (the baseline value of one), whereas methane is only 28 times more potent than CO2. However, the really scary thing is that fluorinated gases, which are manufactured gases used in refrigerants and air conditioners, aerosols, such as hair care products, and some foam products account for 3% of greenhouse gases, but are 23,500 times more potent than CO2 (Source: https://scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/how-climate-works/some-greenhouse-gases-are-stronger-others).

It’s an increasing human population, and the products we use daily along with the vehicles we drive that are causing global warming. The math is irrefutable, even though the ‘news’ only reports facts that don’t make us uncomfortable about our personal role in climate change, so it is much easier to blame farmers for the food they produce for all of us. However, when put on a percentage basis of CO2 considering potency, methane only accounts for a little over 0.4% of Green House Gas production. There are no easy answers as a rapidly increasing human population places more stress on the natural resources, including available land, for food production. However, all food production requires inputs that most people don’t understand. Sufficient crop production to meet the demands of the growing world population takes nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium fertilization, along with herbicides, and pesticides. The fact is that humans are responsible for greenhouse gas production, and blaming animal agriculture for methane and carbon dioxide production by ruminants pales in comparison to the nitrous oxide and fluorocarbons that arise from human populations in industrialized societies. Blaming cattle, and the use of feed byproducts from industries that produce energy, clothing, and human foods such as oils and sweeteners is not only incorrect, but dangerous, as it focuses unwarranted attention on efficient and sustainable agricultural and food systems that are making use of byproducts of other industries rather than dealing with societal problems that are, unfortunately, complex and for which we all bear responsibility.
Source : osu.edu