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Climate advocates are praising the Chinese government’s new dietary guidelines designed to cut meat consumption in half—which would reduce the country’s livestock-related carbon emissions by 1 billion tons by 2030.

Li Junfeng, director general of China’s National Center on Climate Change Strategy and International Cooperation, said that if China’s population of 1.3 billion took up the new guidelines, released once every 10 years, “it is expected that the livestock industry will transform and carbon emissions will be reduced.”

The average person in China currently eats 63 kilograms (138 lbs) of meat every year, which amounts to 28 percent of the world’s meat. The Chinese Nutrition Society (CNS), in partnership with the advocacy groups WildAid, Climate Nexus, and My Plate My Planet, is now advocating that consumers reduce that to 27 kg (39 lbs). That would prompt a 1.5 percent drop in global emissions, more than France and Belgium’s entire yearly output combined.

Notably, the average person in the U.S. eats twice as much meat as the average person in China.

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