The real issue is intensive agriculture vs un-intensive agriculture.
The crop type or the animal involved is not the determining factor.
Any form of agriculture can be high or low intensity.
For example, a pasture-based dairy farmer can cultivate a paddock in year one and plant grass species for the cows to graze.
That paddock won’t get cultivated again until year 6 or 7.
If the cows only eat grass that is grown on the farm, then the system is low intensity and the cow's production will be limited to around 3,500 litres per cow per year.
But if the farmer decided to grow corn and soy crops and feed those crops to the cows. The cows will produce 8,000 litres per cow.
That's a much more intensive system involving a lot of cropping, fertiliser and sprays.
But both systems produce cows' milk.
A similar example for cropping farmers could be made too.
One farmer could grow oats and soybeans for two years and then plant grass to graze sheep on for another two years before cropping the paddock again.
That would be a low-intensity system with a low output.
Another farmer could simply crop their land every year resulting in a much higher output.
They both produce oats but they have very different environmental impacts.
The truth is most plant-based milk are produced by high-yielding, intensive cropping systems that use a lot of inputs, fuel and sprays.
They are usually imported from overseas and come in a non-recyclable tetra-pak.
It's also true that most dairy milk is produced in the same way.
But I get a little bit sad inside when someone says that their plant-based milk of choice is more sustainable than the low-intensity dairy system that we promote at Happy Cow Milk.
As an example, our farmer Chris is super low intensity, he uses no nitrogen fertiliser and no sprays. He barely starts his tractor.
If I was a plant-based milk producer, I would write exactly the same thing as I have today.
Because I would be a low-intensity cropping farmer and I’d want people to understand the difference.
It’s not the cow or the crop. It's the intensity of the cow and the crop that matters.
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