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Cow Poop and Compost: Digesting the Methane Menace

Cow Poop and Compost: Digesting the Methane Menace

Methane is a menace, causing 80 times more damage to the climate in a 20-year time frame than CO2. Two big sources of methane emissions are cows and food waste rotting in landfills. California may provide an example of how to wrangle this greenhouse gas.

Climate One · Climate One from The Commonwealth Club

February 25, 202256m 59s

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Show Notes

In a 20-year time frame, methane is 80 times more damaging to the climate than carbon dioxide. Nationally, 37% of methane emissions come from cows. 17% of all US methane emissions come from food waste rotting in landfills. More than 100 countries, including the US, signed The Global Methane Pledge, promising to reduce methane emissions by 30% by 2030. 

In California, a new law went into effect directly addressing the state’s methane emissions from organic waste and dairy farms. The law targets a 40% reduction in the same time frame. That’s ambitious. What effect will this law have on industrial agriculture, and the general population?  

Guests:

Neil Edgar, Executive Director, California Compost Coalition

J Jordan, Policy Coordinator, Leadership Council for Justice and Accountability

Michael Boccadoro, Executive Director, Dairy Cares

Monique Figueiredo, Chief Executive Officer / Founder / Co-Owner, Compostable LA

Allen Williams, Understanding Ag

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