How milk became a weapon for the far-Right
The London Standard|December 12, 2024
Popping out to get a pint of milk today runs the risk of wading into a fraught culture war.
How milk became a weapon for the far-Right

The furore after Arla Foods announced it was trialling Bovaer feed supplement at UK farms has revealed how easily something that could have been heralded as a technological advancement can be hijacked by far-Right conspiracy theorists spreading misinformation about climate change and falling birth rates. Meanwhile in America, Donald Trump's incumbent health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr is agitating to make raw milk- unpasteurised dairy teeming with dangerous bacteria - legal for human consumption. Simultaneously, oat milk and other alternative products have become the villain, after fears about their nutritional values ripped through social media. How did our relationship with milk go so sour? The Bovaer trials should have come as welcome news. Its active ingredient, 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP), inhibits methane production in dairy cows. By suppressing an enzyme in the cows' stomachs it can reduce methane emissions by up to 30 per cent, claims Dutch company DSM, which produces Bovaer. Burping cows from beef and dairy production account for almost a third of human-caused methane emissions, and methane is far more effective than carbon dioxide at trapping heat in our planet's atmosphere.

If we can get the dairy cows to burp less, we buy more time to enjoy dairy products on a planet that is not entirely ravaged by heatwaves and extreme weather. Arla Foods, the Danish-Swedish dairy cooperative that owns butter brands such as Lurpak and Anchor, announced last month that 30 of its UK farms will trial the Boevar feed additive.

This story is from the December 12, 2024 edition of The London Standard.

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This story is from the December 12, 2024 edition of The London Standard.

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