Can a Burger Help Solve Climate Change?
  newyorker.com
  Eating meat creates huge environmental costs. Impossible Foods thinks it has a solution. Cows are easy to love. Their eyes are a liquid brown, their noses  inquisitive, their udders homely; small children thrill to their moo.
  Most  people like them even better dead. Americans eat three hamburgers a  week, so serving beef at your cookout is as patriotic as buying a gun.  When progressive Democrats proposed a Green New Deal, earlier this year,  leading Republicans labelled it a  plot  to “take away your hamburgers.” The former Trump adviser Sebastian  Gorka characterized this plunder as “what Stalin dreamt about,” and  Trump himself accused the Green New Deal of proposing to “permanently  eliminate” cows. In fact, of course, its authors were merely advocating a  sensible reduction in meat eating. Who would want to take away your  hamburgers and eliminate cows?
  Well, Pat Brown does, and pronto. A sixty-five-year-old emeritus  professor of biochemistry at Stanford University, Brown is the founder  and C.E.O. of Impossible Foods. By developing plant-based beef, chicken,  pork, lamb, dairy, and fish, he intends to wipe out all animal  agriculture and deep-sea fishing by 2035. His first product, the  Impossible Burger, made chiefly of soy and potato proteins and coconut  and sunflower oils, is now in seventeen thousand restaurants. When we  met, he arrived not in Silicon Valley’s obligatory silver Tesla but in  an orange Chevy Bolt that resembled a crouching troll. He emerged  wearing a T-shirt depicting a cow with a red slash through it, and  immediately declared, “The use of animals in food production is by far  the most destructive technology on earth. We see our mission as the last  chance to save the planet from environmental catastrophe.”
  Meat  is essentially a huge check written against the depleted funds of our  environment. Agriculture consumes more freshwater than any other human  activity, and nearly a third of that water is devoted to raising  livestock. One-third of the world’s arable land is used to grow feed for  livestock, which are responsible for 14.5 per cent of global  greenhouse-gas emissions. Razing forests to graze cattle—an area larger  than South America has been cleared in the past quarter century - turs a barbon sing into a carbon spigot.
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