The vast majority (86
percent) of
people around the world identify as meat eaters; and according to the USDA, the
US is the biggest consumer of meat in the
world.
This makes the meat industry an incredibly important sector when it comes to
environmental impact reduction and sparking innovation for sustainability.
Sustainable Brands® caught up with Julie Anna
Potts, President and
CEO of the Meat Institute — an association
that represents 95 percent of all beef and pork sold in the US. Through its
continuous-improvement initiative, the Protein
PACT, it is an industry on a mission to ensure
meat is part of the climate conversation.
“Not only can meat be produced sustainably but it is, in fact, central to
climate and food-security solutions,” she says.
How did you come to lead the Meat Institute? And what is its purpose?
Julie Anna Potts: I’ve worked in agriculture for decades, including through
roles on the Hill and at the American Farm Bureau Federation. One of my
greatest inspirations has always been the dedication of the people who produce
the food we need here at home and for families around the world.
I joined the Meat Institute back in 2018 — and I found that same dedication
carries all the way from livestock producers to the meat packers and processors
we represent.
The Meat Institute represents 350 general members of all sizes — operating
across the United States, Mexico and Canada. These general members
vary in their operations — some handle live animals, others engage only in
further processing. We also have 175 supplier and allied members who provide
critical equipment and services for packers and processors.
We trace our roots back to 1906, just after the passage of the Federal Meat
Inspection Act — one of the first US laws to set federal food-processing
standards. Today, the association represents around 95 percent of beef and pork
sold in the United States — plus chicken, turkey, lamb and veal.
We support members with hands-on technical and regulatory support, proactive
advocacy, unique collaborative opportunities, and our world-class continuous
improvement initiative — the Protein PACT for the People, Animals & Climate of
Tomorrow. Our mission is focused on connecting people and resources to
strengthen trust in the food we produce.
Given its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs), can the meat industry ever truly be part of the climate solution?
JAP: Well, we believe not only that meat can be produced sustainably but
that it is, in fact, central to climate and food-security solutions. According
to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s latest
data, livestock accounts for 12
percent of global GHGs. It also says the livestock sector “has the potential to
achieve significant emission reductions while still meeting the anticipated
increase in the demand for animal products by 2050.”
Producing nutrient-dense foods like meat, milk, and eggs sustainably has never
been more important. The FAO has repeatedly said that livestock provides
crucial
sources of nutrition not easily obtained from other sources.
Consumption of animal-source foods varies around the world, and micronutrient
deficiencies are common even in high-income populations. Iron and vitamin A are
among the most common micronutrient deficiencies around the world —
particularly, in children and pregnant women. Globally, more than half of all
pre-school-aged children — around 372 million — and 1.2 billion women of
child-bearing age suffer from a lack of at least one of three micronutrients:
iron, vitamin A or zinc.
To make sure these foods continue to sustain generations to come, the Meat
Institute has set a target for 100 percent of members to have science-based
GHG-reduction targets by 2030.
Today, 24 members representing a large majority of meat sold in the US have set
or publicly committed to set targets approved by the Science Based Targets
Initiative. More than 60 percent of establishments in our data collection are
already covered by company commitments to reduce GHGs.
Other Protein PACT partners have similarly ambitious goals. For example, the US
beef supply chain has committed to achieve climate neutrality by 2040; US dairy
aims to achieve GHG neutrality by 2050; and the US pork sector has set a goal to
reduce GHGs by 40 percent by 2030.
Through the Protein Pact, you are heavily focused on setting goals and ensuring effective and robust sustainability reporting. But as we’ve seen in other sectors, goal-setting doesn’t necessarily mean action. How will you ensure your members follow through in taking action?
JAP: We’ve spent the last three years building the concept and framework of
the Protein PACT, within our organization and with partners across animal
agriculture. In a sector that has no history of collecting and reporting on
data, it’s remarkable that we’ve been able to gather such momentum for ambitious
targets and transparent verification of progress. Member participation in our
data-collection effort grew 60 percent in 2023, and data now covers more than 90
percent of meat sold in the US and half of all facilities operated by Meat
Institute members.
We now have the next few years to demonstrate that the Protein PACT works in the
long run as a vehicle for driving continuous-improvement action and delivering
on our targets. This will require even greater collaboration with partners
across the supply chain — including our customers like consumer brands, food
service and restaurants, and retailers. It is incumbent on all of us to
streamline efforts and show that working together, we can achieve our goals
because it’s the right thing to do, and because consumers demand nothing less.
Nothing about this is easy. There will be numerous gaps and major innovations
and investments needed to fill those gaps. We have realigned the mandate and
mission of the Foundation for Meat & Poultry Research &
Education to help identify and fill
research gaps, and we’re looking to all of our partners to find new ways each
organization can contribute and ways in which we can collaborate to advance
shared objectives.
What support does your sector need — policy, economic, culture change — to achieve its vision for sustainability?
JAP: First and foremost, we need partners within and beyond animal
agriculture to come together on the common goal of producing the food people
need to thrive, sustainably. No single food or type of production can achieve
that alone; we need every food and every production system to continuously
improve and optimize its impact across our Protein PACT focus areas of climate,
animal care, food safety, labor and human rights, and nutrition.
This common commitment is what will drive filling other gaps. For example, how
to scale technological advances and share best practices for sustainable
productivity growth in the US and around the world.
What are the biggest challenges or barriers to farmers in playing a role in achieving your vision?
JAP: Farmers are, by definition, committed to stewardship of their land and
their animals. But, at our Protein PACT Summit in October, Chair of the US
Roundtable for Sustainable Beef Chad
Ellis made a really powerful
point that, for farmers, “Conservation without compensation is just
conversation.”
In food production, a large portion of GHGs come from the farm; but farmers
cannot shoulder the challenge of reducing emissions for their supply chains
alone. Tackling this challenge requires not only financing but also practical
and technical
innovations
that must be developed in collaboration across the supply chain, with
implementation and measurement efforts also aligned throughout.
That’s why one of our top priorities is to work hand-in-hand with farmers,
ranchers, regulators, and partners across the food system — connecting people
and resources to ensure meat continues to be a vital, trusted pillar of healthy
diets and thriving communities for generations to come.
How do farmers ‘square the circle’ between addressing rampant climate change while meeting growing demand for the food people need?
JAP: Recent decades show a proven track record of success in producing
nutrient-dense animal-source foods more sustainably than ever. Over the last
30-40 years, US dairy farmers have cut
emissions
from each gallon of milk by nearly 20 percent. Ranchers have reduced emissions
per pound of beef produced by more than 40
percent
while also producing more than 66 percent more
beef per animal.
And US pig farmers have
decreased water use by 25 percent, land use by nearly 76 percent, energy use by
7 percent, and have shrunk their carbon footprint by almost 8 percent.
Further achievements are within reach. We are doing the work to produce the food
people need to thrive, while protecting the environment we all share.
Many people think that cutting back on — or cutting out — meat is necessary to save the planet. What would you say to that? Can meat really be sustainable?
JAP: As I mentioned, the FAO says that livestock contribute 12 percent of
global greenhouse gases but play a critical role in healthy diets. In addition,
according to the UN, livestock contribute about 40
percent of the world’s agricultural
value and provide livelihoods and incomes for at least 1.3 billion people
globally. An estimated 12 percent
of the world’s population depends solely on livestock for its livelihood.
Livestock also graze on land that can’t support other crops, turn crops and
by-products people can’t eat into high-quality protein and other nutrients; and
play a key role in improving soil
health
and achieving bio-circularity, among other benefits.
Like all foods, meat must strive to optimize its environmental impact —
including by setting and achieving science-based targets in line with the Paris Agreement goals.
There’s no doubt that not only can meat be sustainable — global sustainability
goals cannot be achieved without meat.
Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jan 26, 2024 11am EST / 8am PST / 4pm GMT / 5pm CET