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  1. Banning the importation of feed stock such as palm kernel would be a start.
    Restricting fertiliser import would help raise its price and also reduce its use.
    Both very soft moves towards addressing a problem that really need much harsher restrictive control.

  2. In defence of cows, the counter-argument one rarely hears put is that cows, in spite of emitting methane, add no additional carbon to the eco-system. At least not if fed on grass and hay. Grass is a bio-fuel. It sequesters carbon from the atmosphere. Cows eat it and convert it to methane (for sure a potent ‘greenhouse gas’), but within about 12 years methane naturally breaks down into carbon-dioxide and water, and is ready to be absorbed in the growing of more grass.

    Contrast this with fossil-fuels which have lain safely buried for millennia, but which are then dug up, burnt, and their emissions added to the eco-system as carbon that definitely was not there before. Not to say that intensive dairying is not causing pollution problems of other sorts, but the real carbon ‘elephant’ in the room is fossil fuels.

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