For livestock facilities improving nitrogen circularity, reducing nutrient loss to air and surface waters, and better utilization of manure have been hallmarks of pursuing sustainability. Limiting the release of greenhouse gases has now been added to that list.
- Manure Management: Implement efficient management
practices to minimize methane and nitrous oxide emissions. Anaerobic
digestion systems, which convert manure into biogas for energy production,
are a primary example. Other options include aeration, acidification,
frequent manure removal and application, and diet modification. Techniques
primarily focus on reducing methane emissions.
- Enteric Fermentation: Methane is produced during
digestion and fermentation in an animal's digestive tract. Developing
feeding strategies that reduce enteric fermentation is an active line of
research for dairy cattle, with products such as Monensin and seaweed
being suggested.
- Feed Efficiency: Enhance feed efficiency by utilizing
improved nutrition strategies, including formulating balanced diets and
adding feed additives. Improved feed efficiency reduces the amount of feed
required to produce a unit of meat, thereby lowering emissions associated
with feed production. Improved feed efficiency due to improved grinding
and, as a result, digestibility has been a key improvement in
environmental performance.
- Genetic Selection: Select swine breeds or genetic lines
with higher feed efficiency and lower emissions. Genetic improvements can
help reduce swine production's environmental impact over time and have
been key in our environmental efficiency gains. .
- Energy Efficiency: Improve energy efficiency in swine
production facilities by using energy-efficient equipment and optimizing
heating, ventilation, and lighting systems. Optimizing use reduces energy
consumption and associated emissions. Examples include switching lighting
to LED (an increasingly popular approach in poultry housing). Fan staging
to increase fan efficiency, installation of VFDs on fans to improve
performance, and closely monitoring minimum ventilation requirements to
reduce propane demand for maintaining barn temperature.
- Renewable Energy: Incorporate renewable energy sources such as solar panels, wind turbines, or biogas systems to generate clean energy for powering swine production facilities. Renewable energy can significantly reduce carbon emissions. Many swine farms have started adding solar panels to help generate clean energy, but so do changes in energy supply technologies throughout the state.
Scope 3
- Nutrient Management: Optimize nutrient management
practices to minimize the release of nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse
gas. Nutrient management involves carefully managing the method and timing
of manure or synthetic fertilizers application to crops. Considering
nutrient content, timing, and soil conditions. Optimizing rate, timing,
method, and soil conditions is a huge topic and will continue to be
studied.
- Select feed ingredients from agricultural production practices that result in lower carbon footprints of the supplied materials. Life cycle analysis is helping differentiate how substituting DDGS may impact feed carbon relative to soybean meal. Similarly, future work will need to identify how recycling manure, use of cover crops, and reduced tillage affect yield and greenhouse gas emissions, and the digestibility and livestock performance interact to help inform ingredient selection and inclusion rates. These factors will need to be balanced with price and availability.
Carbon Offsetting
Compensate for any remaining emissions by investing in carbon offset projects. This can involve supporting activities such as reforestation or using trees and grassland around building sites to increase carbon storage, renewable energy projects that reduce emissions beyond the farm, and implementing or participating in carbon capture and storage projects.
Below, estimates of
different emissions for a deep pit swine finishing facility (wean to finish).
These estimates are meant to be illustrative, may not include all emissions,
and won't represent all farms.
- Manure Management: A deep pit swine storage would emit
approximately 192 kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Enteric Fermentation: IPCC Tier 1 approach estimates
1.5 kg CH4/hd-year, or 42 kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Barn Heat: Harmon et al. (Sizing minimum ventilation to
save heating energy in swine housing) estimated usage of 2 gallons per pig
space per year, or 11.4 kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Barn Electricity Use: Barn design will impact energy
use, but around 25 kWh/pig space per year (see Hanna et al., 2016 – Energy
use for field operations, crop drying, and swine housing on University
Farms). Iowa is estimated to generate 0.36 kg N2O/MWh and 430.5
kg CO2/MWh. These emissions are about 0.5 kg CO2,e/kWh,
or 13.5 kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Feed production: According to Benavides et al. (2020),
swine feed has about 0.4 kg CO2,e/kg feed. If we have a feed
conversion ratio of 2.5 lb feed/lb live weight gain, then 1 kg CO2,e/kg
of pig sold. Assuming 2.2 turns a year and 280 lb pigs sold, this results
in 265 kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Feed movement: The average freight truck in the U.S.
emits 162 grams of CO2 per ton-mile. Every pig space needed
0.73 tons of feed/year, and assuming feed was delivered 100 miles gives 12
kg CO2,e/head-year.
- Pig movement: Again, assuming 100 miles of pig
transport to the processing plant (finish weight of 280 lb) and 100 miles
from the nursery facility (15 lb wean pig) gives 5.2 kg CO2,e/head-year.
I had a carbon
footprint of 0.5 tons CO2,e/pig space per year, or about 2 kg CO2,e/kg
live weight produced or 3 CO2,e/kg of "take home" meat.
Two caveats, I didn't include the carbon footprint associated with generating
piglets or dealing with mortalities. We can do something easy for mortalities,
like assume a 3% death loss and multiply our results by 3%. Assuming culled
animals used all the feed and generated all the manure they would have if they
were alive, gives a cushion for using energy to handle the carcasses. The
approach raises the lifecycle costs to 0.51 tons CO2,e/pig space per
year, and 3.2 CO2,e/kg of "take home" meat. Unfortunately,
I don't have a simple trick to deal with generating piglets. To get this
estimate, we need to work on an example sow farm (there is always next time).
Figure 1. Percent of swine finishing greenhouse gas emissions from different sources.
It's important to note
that achieving carbon neutrality in livestock production will require a
combination of these strategies, and the feasibility of implementation can vary
depending on factors such as location, scale of production, available resources,
and livestock species. Regular assessment, adaptation, and improvement are
necessary to ensure ongoing progress toward carbon neutrality.
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