



















Is farming the world’s greatest cause of environmental destruction? Even as a thought experiment, it may be hard to imagine. Fossil fuel has been on top of the climate story, and farming nowhere features in this discourse. But even if the world weans itself from fossil fuels, it will still find itself slouching towards disaster as the fossil fuels story is only two-thirds of the climate story. The food we eat and the farms that produce it contribute to the crisis too.
The core issue is the expanding agricultural footprints. Already the size of all of Asia and all of Europe has been converted into farmland and that is not without a cost — biodiverse habitats destroyed, pristine forests compromised and nature’s footprints have shrunk. The farming sprawl is thirty times that of the urban sprawl. If current trends unfold, the world farmers will need to convert more area to fill nearly 10 billion human bellies by 2050. That would wipe out more forests and other natural carbon storehouses, our best defences against climate change. And on top, some millions would still go hungry.
The food system itself is not climate friendly and probably the most destructive. Award-winning journalist Michael Grunwald dives into We Are Eating the Earth to show how the biggest of our dilemmas about feeding the world can be resolved without devouring the planet. Land is our most precious resource, because it has the twin-task of producing much more food and absorbing much more carbon to save us. Crops, like us, are carbon-based life forms that grow on the earth and as Mark Twain said, they’re not making more of it.
Land is the vast reservoir of carbon, holding three times as much as the atmosphere and four times as much as above-ground vegetation. If the Paris climate summit targets are to be met, the world will need to eliminate three-fourths of food-related emissions by 2050. But soils have not yet been prepared to sequester such emissions; extractive agriculture instead depletes soils.
Grunwald has evidence to argue that every piece of land needs to be valued either as a potential food source or a potential carbon sink. The book cleverly frames the solution around efficiency: pointing out that the more food we can produce on less land, the more land we can keep in its natural state. Quitting fossil fuels can only be part of the solution, the challenge is the need to preserve ecosystems that store carbon.
Grunwald takes guidance from a brilliant scientist Tim Searchinger, a senior research scholar at Princeton and senior fellow at the World Resources Institute, who began his career as a lawyer to navigate how science and politics influence agricultural interests. Is meat really that bad? Searchinger’s answer boils down to this: ‘It’s land….meat uses too much land, just like ethanol.’ One cow meat is as much as 100 chickens, emitting 50 times more greenhouse gases than coal. But who cares as more animals suffer and die before reaching our plates.
Food is now as big a climate challenge as oil and coal. We Are Eating the Earth is a warning to the present generation to keep the planet habitable for the next generation. The production of our food harms the environment in many ways. While the farms that feed the world might not consume the entire earth, two-fifths of our planet’s land area remains vulnerable. More sobering still, that figure is growing as the global population continues to grow and more people become wealthy enough to eat meat.
Grunwald has recommended four steps: produce more food per acre; protect key habitats and keep them off limits to food production; reduce demand for meat, biofuels, and other land consuming products; restore unproductive lands to nature. In conclusion, he advocates both systemic change and personal action. Each of us is eating the earth and how we eat matters.
Most of what Grunwald narrates is realistic. Clearly, eating ‘plant rich diets’ is the best opportunity to reduce carbon pollution. Need it be said that only systemic changes can stop frying the planet. Guilt-tripping ordinary people into individual actions may have modest impact which distract from corporate and government actions which are more needed. We Are Eating the Earth is strongly recommended as one of the most important works on climate this decade.
The reviewer is an independent writer, researcher and academic
Title: We Are Eating the Earth: The Race to Fix our Food System and Save Our Climate
Author: Michael Grunwald
Publisher: Simon&Schuster, New Delhi
Price: ₹999
Published on May 10, 2026
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。