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Wildlife & Biodiversity

The Biggest Threat to Biodiversity Is on Our Plates

various sustainable plant-based foods on a table
Sponsored by:
various sustainable plant-based foods on a table
Sponsored by:
David Steele, President, Earthsave Canada 

David Steele

President, Earthsave Canada 

Renaud Gignac, Administrative Coordinator, Coalition for a Sustainable Food Transition 

Renaud Gignac

Administrative Coordinator, Coalition for a Sustainable Food Transition 


By changing our eating habits — and centering our diets more around plant-based foods — we have the power to benefit the world’s biodiversity.

The situation is dire. Research shows that our impact on the planetary biosphere is enormously damaging — and it’s mostly due to what we put on our plates. The good news is that we have the power to change that.

While we obtain, globally, only about 18 per cent of our calories from animal products, 78 per cent of the world’s agricultural land is used to raise and feed farmed animals. That’s half of the habitable land on the planet used to provide only a small sliver of the food we eat —  the impact on biodiversity is huge.

A recent article published by the World Economic Forum summarizes it well: “As agriculture is threatening wildlife, it’s replacing it with livestock.” 

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A shocking bottom line 

An enormous fraction of this planet’s resources has been appropriated by us at extreme cost to the rest of the life on this planet. And, tragically, it’s getting worse. A seminal study published in 2018 powerfully showed the extent to which we’ve reshaped the biosphere already. According to the study, 96 per cent of the mammalian biomass on Earth is now composed of humans and farmed animals, while 70 per cent of avian biomass is farmed birds. An earlier analysis by the University of Manitoba’s Vaclav Smil showed essentially the same thing.

96 per cent of the mammalian biomass on Earth is now composed of humans and farmed animals.

According to the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), the biodiversity equivalent of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), we’re clearing land at an accelerating rate — mainly to feed livestock. 

As Oxford climate expert Marco Springmann has shown, it’s mathematically impossible to meet our global carbon budget if current trends in meat and dairy consumption continue.

What can we do about it?

The IPCC, the United Nations Environment Programme, and the IPBES have all asserted that we must move rapidly toward diets centered much more on plant-based foods. And, if we do so, the benefits will be enormous. Because eating plants directly requires far less land than eating animals, we could return vast tracts of land to the wild while dramatically increasing our ability to feed the world.

The benefits for biodiversity would be extraordinary. As a 2020 study published in the prestigious scientific journal Nature quantifies, re-wilding just 15 per cent of the land currently used for agriculture could prevent 60 per cent of the extinctions over the next several decades. Were we to restore 30 per cent of the land to the wild, fully 70 per cent of at-risk species could be saved. 

And, as a very important bonus, we’d also be creating the conditions to sequester some 30 per cent of the carbon dioxide accumulated in the atmosphere since the start of the industrial revolution.

There’s hope

There’s real reason for optimism. We can get off the destructive track we’ve been on by collectively changing the way we eat. Why not check out the multitude of plant-based recipes available online? And make sure to let your political representatives know of the need to quickly address this issue. Cultural traditions are strong, especially when it comes to food, but history has repeatedly shown that human societies are capable of stepping up to new challenges and changing long-lasting practices for the common good. We can and must make a difference. 


To learn more on this and other related issues, check out the informative blog.

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