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Developing Nations Call for ‘Meat Tax’ on High-Income Countries 

Why is it in News?

  • At COP3028 low-income countries (Africa + Pacific) issued the Belém Declaration demanding a GHG pricing mechanism (meat tax”) on high-income countries’ industrial livestock sector.
  • They argue overconsumption of meat in rich nations → disproportionate GHG emissions, especially methane.
  • They demand 20% of revenues from the tax to be directed to the Loss and Damage Fund.

Relevance

GS 3 – Environment & Climate Change

  • Polluter pays principle applied to food systems & livestock emissions.
  • Methane (CH), NO emissions; agricultures GHG footprint (~33% globally).
  • Loss and Damage Fund financing debates; COP negotiation issues.
  • Sustainable diets, overconsumption, ecological footprint.

GS 2 – International Relations

  • Climate equity: developing vs developed country responsibilities.
  • Global negotiations (COP30, Belém Declaration) and South-South coalitions.
  • Transition pathways for high-income economies.

What Is a ‘Meat Tax’ Proposal?

  • GHG pricing mechanism targeting industrial livestock in high-income economies.
  • Based on polluter pays principle → those causing higher emissions must compensate climate-vulnerable nations.
  • Intended to reduce overconsumption-driven emissions and support climate adaptation in developing nations.

Why Agriculture Is Under Scrutiny

  • Food systems contribute ~33% of global GHG emissions.
  • Livestock = majority of agri emissions, dominated by methane (CH₄).
  • High emission footprint:
    • Beef: 70 kg COe/kg
    • Pork: 12 kg COe/kg
    • Chicken: 9.9 kg COe/kg
    • Legumes: 2 kg/kg
    • Nuts: 0.4 kg/kg

What the Belém Declaration Seeks

  • High-income countries + major economies (OECD, EU, China) to:
    • Introduce emission pricing on industrial meat.
    • Transfer 20% revenue to the Loss and Damage Fund.
  • Apply the polluter pays principle beyond fossil fuels → food systems.
  • Push for inclusion of animal protein overconsumption transition in future COP agendas.

Who Are the Signatories?

  • 28 nations across Africa and the Pacific (Nigeria, Uganda, Fiji, Vanuatu, PNG, Kiribati, Liberia, etc.).
  • Represent 14 million highly climate-vulnerable people.
  • Supported by 80+ NGOs and international organisations.

Rationale Behind the Demand

a) Disproportionate Emissions

  • High-income nations consume 4–5x the recommended meat intake (EAT-Lancet).
  • OECD average: 71.4 kg/person/year
  • China: 62 kg
  • Developing countries: 26.6 kg
  • Climate impact from Northern industrial livestock far exceeds that of smallholder livestock systems in the South.

b) Inequity in Climate Burden

  • Developing countries criticized for methane emissions (e.g., India) though:
    • Their systems are low-inputmulti-purposesubsistence-based.
    • Emissions per animal are generally lower than industrial Western systems.
  • Industrial livestock systems in rich countries → high feed demanddeforestationhigh energy inputsmanure CH₄, NO emissions.

c) Rising Livestock Demand Unsustainable

  • FAO projection:
    • Global herd size to rise 50% by 2050 (from 2012 baseline).
  • Breaks alignment with Net Zero 2050.

Why High-Income Countries Are Targeted ?

  • Meat consumption levels exceed sustainable thresholds by large margins.
  • Industrial livestock expansion linked to:
    • Large land use
    • Forest loss
    • High methane and nitrous oxide emissions
    • High water/energy footprint
  • Benefits of a meat tax:
    • Lower production incentives
    • Shift to plant-based diets
    • Reduced land use
    • Higher carbon sequestration through rewilding/restoration

How the Tax Revenue Will Be Used ?

  • At least 20% to Loss and Damage Fund:
    • Compensation for countries facing sea-level rise, storms, floods, droughts
    • Especially for small island developing states (SIDS)
  • Remaining revenue (country-dependent) could be used for:
    • Climate mitigation policies
    • Dietary transition programs
    • Sustainable agriculture support

Key Arguments by Developing Nations

  • Overconsumption in rich nations = major cause of food-related emissions.
  • Food-related climate crisis is not just a developing-world problem.
  • Meat consumption and fossil fuel use have similar entrenched inequity patterns.
  • Industrial livestock must be treated like fossil fuels in emission accounting.

Counterarguments & Challenges

  • Industrial meat lobby denies high emission contribution.
  • Concerns about:
    • Inflation
    • Food affordability
    • Sovereignty over dietary choices
  • Implementation requires:
    • Strong MRV system for livestock emissions
    • Agreement on social equity and revenue sharing
    • Political acceptance in OECD nations

Conclusion

  • The Belém Declaration marks the first collective demand to price GHG emissions from industrial livestock in wealthy nations based on the polluter pays principle.
  • Scientific evidence shows agriculture—particularly industrial livestock—is a major driver of global emissions, with high-income consumption patterns disproportionately responsible.
  • A meat tax could reduce emissions, correct inequities, fund Loss & Damage support, and accelerate a global shift toward sustainable food systems.

December 2025
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