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I don't buy it.
In 2008 when the travel industry crashed in the wake of the market crash, and again in 2020 after COVID lockdowns started, we saw significant decreases in pollution.
Meat isn't the problem. Fossil fuels are.
Are you comparing that to a time that everyone stopped eating beef or how are you using that information to make the claim that meat isnβt the problem?
I'm pointing to observable cause-and-effect.
That is the classic problem of a correlation. If you are sitting in a room that is warm and you notice that when you are using your laptop the room is slightly warmer and when your laptop is off the room is slightly cooler would you say that the driving force for the temperature of the room is your laptop? Or could it also be the oven, the outside temperature, the heating/air conditioning, the number of people in the room, etc. we do have enough evidence that global air travel is a significant contributor to ghg and therefore climate change but itβs estimated to be 2.5% compared to agriculture which is 10%