Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Happy Earth Day!


Breastfeed, because it is not nice to fool Mother Nature.


It's a natural, renewable resource and is all the baby needs for the first six months of life.

A woman starts to produce colostrum quite early in her pregnancy. Her baby receives this concentrated milk, which is rich in immune factors, as soon as he is born. During the next couple of weeks, the colostrum slowly changes into mature milk and productivity increases to meet the baby’s needs. Continued milk production depends on milk removal – the more her baby nurses, the more milk the mother will produce.

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It requires no resources for packaging, shipping or disposal.

The manufacture of artificial formulas involves the need for huge dairy farms, milking machines, cattle feed, manure disposal , formula factories, packaging and shipping, with it’s attendant costs.

“If every baby in the USA is bottle-fed, almost 86,000 tons of tin plate are used up in the required 550 million discarded babymilk tins.”

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No precious energy is wasted producing artificial baby milk and related products.

Mothers do not need special foods in order to produce milk for their babies. Human milk is ready to serve from the original containers. Breastfeeding does not require heating, cooling or sterilizing.

“Although energy required to boil water and sterilize bottles and nipples can readily be accessed in industrialized countries, it more often than not comes from polluting nuclear or power generating stations. In poor countries women often spend hours every day collecting scarce firewood. A bottle fed baby needs about 1 litre of boiled water to prepare feeds and 2 litres to sterilize the bottles and nipples. This requires more than half a kilo of precious firewood per day.”

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No land needs to be deforested for pasture or crop production.

Dairy farms require arable land to raise feed as well as space for the cows themselves.

“The production of artificial baby milks requires hundreds of millions of lactating cows. In India alone, to replace breastmilk, 135 million lactating cows would be needed. In Mexico to produce 1 kilogram of baby milk would require 12.5 square metres of cleared land.”

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It does not create pollution from the manufacturing of human milk substitutes, bottles, nipples and cans.

Think about the resources needed to make the glass and plastic bottles and silicone teats, very little of which is recycled, and the resulting pollution.

“Phthalates, a chemical used in the production of plastic, has been identified in all 15 brands of infant formulas, tested by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food in Great Britain. Nine of the brands tested had levels high enough to result in reduced sperm counts in rats.”

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It helps space babies by suppressing fertility in the mother.

“Breastfeeding reduces fertility rates and prevents more births than all other forms of birth control combined. In Africa breastfeeding prevents an average of 4 births per woman. In Bangladesh breastfeeding prevents about 6.5 births per woman. Chilean women, exclusively breastfeeding for six months, reported no pregnancies while of those bottle fed, 72 per cent became pregnant.”

Breastfeeding women rarely menstruate while their babies are exclusively breastfeeding. Not only is there money saved on sanitary products and their disposal, but there is a considerable impact on the environment.

“In the UK, each menstruating woman uses between 286 and 358 towels or tampons per year, 98% of which are flushed down the toilet. Fifty-two per cent of these are released untreated into the sea where tampons require 6 months to biodegrade, sanitary towels need longer. The plastic liners on sanitary towels will not biodegrade and remain as a pollutant”

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REFERENCES

http://www.reducepackaging.com/article.html

The Ecological Impact of Bottle Feeding, by Andrew Radford, Baby Milk Action

http://www.infactcanada.ca/ren_res.htm

Breastmilk: the perfect renewable resource

http://www.lllusa.org/green.php

Human Milk is Green, Ecologically Speaking...

2 comments:

Eliza P. said...

excellent post but, to be fair, mama does need to consume more calories to create breastmilk, so the land-to raise-the-cows argument isn't as fabulous as it looks on the surface. That is, breastfeeding requires land-to-feed-the-mama.

The lactation consultant is in! said...

Yes, mama does need to consume more calories to create breastmilk.

Mothers make 20 to 32 ounces of milk a day. Nobody really knows how many extra calories are need to make this amount, because we all metabolize food differently. However, it is generally estimated to be up to 500 calories a day.

There are two ways of looking at this:
- mama can consume an extra peanut butter sandwich on whole wheat bread and a glass of milk each day
or
- mama can look at this as an easy way to lose weight without changing her diet at all.

In either case, the cost is miniscule compared to that of clearing land, feeding and raising cows, and dealing with the methane cows produce, let alone the other costs related to producing formula. Let's not even go into the additional health costs related to artificial feeding!

You may find this to be interesting reading too:

Is Breastmilk Green?
ttp://www.platypusmedia.com/docs/green.html