Perfectly illustrates the futility of interfering with bovine digestion
According to Google that looks to be about 10x human CO2 production and between a quarter and a third of human CH4, if agriculture is included.
That's
just termites.
As I've mentioned here before, interestingly if you add human respiration and metabolism to the carbon emissions, it adds around 10% to human activity emissions. However it tends not to be included with the reasoning of 'that's just releasing carbon that was just captured by the food they eat so doesn’t count as net release', which begs the question of why it's included for livestock too.
Also interestingly, the size of the Amazon rainforest, that massive carbon sink which we are supposedly so dependent on, is a relatively recent phenomenon since the wiping out of the indigenous populations a few hundred years ago. So I have to wonder, those years ago, when the Amazon was not present and wildlife populations (thus emissions) were significantly higher than now, what checked carbon levels?
For those arguing 'lots of scientists believe x', that's as poor an argument as when used by anyone else who goes 'lots of people cleverer than me believe it thus it must be true' or 'so many believe it, it must be true'. That's a blind faith position. Argument should be based on the best available evidence, not what others believe (although all of us are taking our views from what others have told us about this so ultimately we're all believers in some form, even if we come to our own conclusions on whatbwe hear- for this reason, for most of the global population, anything badged as scientific is as much a faith position as any religion).
Hopefully we can agree that there is a correlation that, since the industrial revolution, carbon emissions from human activities have increased. In that time there has also been a change in global temperature. I'd argue that correlation and causation are different things and it's probably too early to tell on a geological timescale. However, I do think humans are excessive consumers and curbing the overexploitation of the environment would be beneficial for biodiversity as well as reducing human carbon emissions, regardless of the effect that has. Sustainability is a good thing whichever side of this debate one sits on IMO- perhaps with the exception of
@Karol's perspective of burning more fossil fuels.
Will be interesting to see what happens over the next few years as we move to a solar minimum.