So a lot of crops are fertilized with manure, which usually comes from the cattle industry, and to my knowledge, there’s no reliable way to tell what the plant-based foods you’re buying is fertilized with.

Some crops are fertilized with processed sewage sludge and/or food waste, but since most humans still eat meat, would you consider this vegan? Side note, processing of sewage and food waste is often also used to generate electricity, heat, and in some cases the methane is added directly to the municipal natural gas supply, would you consider these services no longer vegan in that case.

Finally, and I guess this is mainly relevant to those who are vegans for environmentalism, but the only real alternative to manure is chemical fertilizers, often made from petroleum, and have their own environmental problems. I guess you could cut out the cow by harvesting hay and putting it in a digester to make fertilizer, but as far as I know, no one currently does this since it would be a lot more expensive than both manure and chemical fertilizer.

What do you make of this? Does it bother you, or are you okay with it, or have you even found alternatives to these problems?

  • @fidibus@lemmy.161.social
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    fedilink
    43 years ago

    I don’t care at all. If there was a bigger vegan movement I think it would be cool to have more veganic farming, but I don’t care otherwise.

    Farming with animal manure is the same problem to me as buying something from a person that’s not vegan, which I don’t have an issue with at all.