Dutch farmers react to climate kooks

 Just the News:

Furious Dutch farmers brought cows to The Hague and threatened to slaughter the animals on Tuesday in protest of the Netherlands' $26 billion climate plan that could reduce the livestock population by 30%.

The Netherlands, one of Europe's top greenhouse gas emitters, is planning on halving its nitrogen output by 2030, Bloomberg reported. The government plan would shutter some farms, as much of the nitrogen is blamed on manure and fertilizer from cattle.
...

Hundreds of farmers protested with two cows.

"If the nitrogen measures are adopted, one of these two ladies will not go home, but will receive a one-way ticket to the slaughterhouse," farmer Koos Cromwijk said in front of Parliament, according to Dutch outlet ANP.

The output goal is in compliance with European Union rules to reduce pollution. The Netherlands is the world's second-largest agricultural exporter, per AFP, and some regions of the country will need to cut as much as 95% of emissions.

Farmers protested the measures last week by using their tractors to block traffic.

"It must happen gradually and that's not the case," 74-year-old Jan Poorter told AFP. "You can't just close farms that are hundreds of years old. You just can't!"

The regulations come as some experts predict a global food crisis is weeks away.

Food security intelligence expert Sara Menker told the United Nations Security Council late last month that the world has about 10 weeks of grain left.

"[T]he Russia-Ukraine war did not start the food security crisis. It simply added fuel to a fire that was long burning. A crisis we detected tremors from long before the COVID 19 pandemic exposed the fragility of our supply chains," she explained.
...

This looks like a way to accelerate the predicted food crisis.  It is pretty clear to me that the predicted "climate crisis" is overrated, but the food crisis is not. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

29 % of companies say they are unlikely to keep insurance after Obamacare

Is the F-35 obsolete?