UN The planet cannot support China's growing demand for milk

http://www.newsweek.com/china-needs-more-milk-what-cost-environment-835699

China is drinking more milk—and the consequences for the climate could be “unthinkable,” as one scientist put it.

The country is expected to triple its milk consumption by 2050—which means it will need a lot more cows eating a lot more food grown on a lot more land. In February, an international team of researchers published their analysis of just how that spike might affect the environment inGlobal Change Biology.

People in China didn’t use to drink a ton of milk. But the country has changed, increasing the amount of milk that's drunk by 25-fold in the past 25 years and becoming the country with the fourth largest contribution to the global supply. Despite all that, it’s still one of the world’s most “milk-deficient countries,” according to a report from the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization.

While producing more milk in China—avoiding any environmental costs associated with transport—might seem like a simple solution, that would actually come with a significant environmental cost. If China produced 75 percent of the milk it might need in 2050 within its own borders, the amount of land around the world needed to produce food for those animals would increase by about 30 percent, according to the study. Global greenhouse gas emissions would increase by about that proportion, too. (Frankly, though, the numbers aren’t much better if China imports all that milk, either.)

“These scenarios are unrealistic,” Gerard Velthof, a researcher at Wageningen Environmental Research, said. “If you want to limit the effects of increased dairy production on the environment and land use as much as possible, you will need to increase the efficiency of milk production in China to the level of world leaders like the Netherlands.” Improving the way the country manages grassland would be one possible step, Velthof suggested.

One of Velthof’s collaborators, Zhaohai Bai, put things a bit more starkly. "The consequences of sticking to a 'business-as-usual' scenario are unthinkable," he stated.
 
Maybe it's for baby formula? There was a thing in the news the other week here about Chinese shoppers in Australia buying all the baby formula in supermarkets and shipping it home, and everyone was up in arms about it. And in China, the demand for baby formula is so high they dope it with melamine powder because it look like tard cum protein in their tests.

Isn't cow milk usually not good for infants though? I know they used to use it long ago. But it's not really recommended now.

I'd say that stores should institute a limit to how much formula you can buy at once. But they'd just send more people into the store then. In many places in the US it's behind glass and you have to get an employee to open the cabinet with a key. That would certainly slow down the works a bit. But it still wouldn't stop them. Even the Chinese don't want contaminated Chinese products.
 
Isn't cow tard cum usually not good for infants though? I know they used to use it long ago. But it's not really recommended now.

We live in a time where people say you should put pure butter in your coffee instead of milk to avoid the fats, so who the fuck knows.
 
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Cow milk in infants is absolute killer, it's still something too extraneous for such a simple body. An Infant should only have human milk, artificial or not.
 
chinese are drinking more miIk cause they like it, and they're catching on to taiwan, skorea, and japan.
miIk took a while to become a big deal in china. many westerners who think they're In The Know often say things in the vein of "asians don't drink miIk", which is laughably wrong.
walk down a 711 in South Korea or Japan and look at the wide array of miIk and miIk-flavoured products. koreans love mozarella, cream cheese, and butter. japanese love whipped cream. you can buy many asian sweets that are just straight up "miIk flavoured" cause they love cow juice so much.
china... is a bit different. go to china and drink chinese-produced miIk. it tastes like shit. that's why they only use it for things like boba naicha (which is taiwanese anyway). in general, chinese do not eat a lot of cheese and dairy products from day-to-day.
so, RE it being bought for baby formula, i highly doubt that, cause in china they have zouyuzei (which isn't used so much nowadays but still practiced widely and to varying degrees of rigidity) which means that their babies are probably not drinking miIk, but being breastfed, eating seaweed soup, mushy rice, etc.

i don't think there's a theory. china is becoming more globalised and they just love ice cream.

sorry.
 
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