What happens to our Agriculture and who benefits from our Farmers
KEL SHARMAN, a Tasmanian beef farmer, was astonished to find out the retail
price of meat from his beast sold this week in a Sydney butchers.
"You're joking," Mr Sharman said. "I'm being screwed”
In theory, every piece of meat sold in Australia can now be identified and
traced to its source paddock via the bar code on its packaging.
In practice, it is extremely difficult to do because of the complex, often
disjointed relationship between the shop and the farm, abattoir, transport,
storage and distribution companies. Many retailers are unable to say where their
produce comes from on a given day.
But sources have traced the origin and carbon footprint of a basket of
groceries, using methods and data from the CSIRO and the federal Department of
Climate Change.
Even though most of the items were grown and processed in Australia, the most
conservative estimates say the food travelled almost twice the circumference of
the earth by road and ship before it reached the supermarket shelf.
After being fattened for more than a year in a paddock near the Tasmanian
village of Sassafrass, Mr Sharman's beast was herded into a truck and taken
about 160 kilometres west to an abattoir at Smithton. The best fillets were
carved from its carcass in a boning room and loaded on to a refrigerated lorry
bound for Burnie, 90 kilometres to the east.
From there the meat travelled to Port Melbourne in a sealed container, where it
was loaded on to another truck and dispatched up the Hume Highway for a journey
of at least 880 kilometres. On reaching the distributor Andrews Meat at Dulwich
Hill, the beef was transferred to a smaller van and delivered to Hudsons Meats
at Surry Hills where it was on sale for $69 a kilogram.
Based on the vehicle fuel types and average trucking speeds, the half a kilogram
of beef generated about 460 grams, or almost its own weight, in carbon dioxide
emissions along the way.
This amount of greenhouse gas is much lower than that generated by most
commercial meat, mainly because the cattle were grass fed.
The figure does not include energy used to refrigerate and store the meat while
it aged, nor the much larger amounts of energy consumed and emitted by the beast
when it was being fattened for slaughter.
Mr Sharman's steak can be traced via the National Livestock Identification
System, under which a microchip is attached to the ear of every calf destined
for slaughter. The system tracks individual beasts as they are moved, an
extensive accounting exercise but one that makes the industry more accountable
to its customers. "There is no doubt it has made it more difficult for us but I
think it is something the public is asking for now," Mr Sharman said. "Ten years
ago it was a lot simpler with a lot less paperwork."
Mr Sharman's distributor, Greenham Tasmania, said it wanted to make its meat
easy to trace because transparency gave it credibility in the eyes of its
overseas customers.