Cutting Cow Farts to Combat Climate Change
A new frontier in the war against global warming.
Methane emissions from the burps and farts of livestock accounts for around 15% of global greenhouse gas emissions. But the trick to reducing this could lie with some of Kenya’s smallholder farmers. By using very simple techniques to transform the way they manage their soil and animals, dairy farmers are helping their cows emit less methane per litre of milk they produce. And it’s all being paid for by big polluters, in what could become a major form of carbon offsetting. Is this a new frontier in the fight against climate change? World Hacks has been to rural Kenya to find out.
Also on the programme, one US academic asks you to think again about obesity.
Presenter: Vincent Ni
Reporter: Harriet Noble
(Photo: Cows eating)
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- Tue 18 Jul 201702:06GMTBBC World Service Online, Americas and the Caribbean, UK DAB/Freeview & West and Central Africa only
- Tue 18 Jul 201703:06GMTBBC World Service East Asia & South Asia only
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