3/2/2026 at 3:26:26 PM
Milk is surprisingly intensive in terms of greenhouse emissions. It is somewhere around 1 to 3 kg CO2-equivalent per kg of milk.Milk protein costs around 95 kg of CO2-equivalent emissions per kg of protein, which is apparently what was used in the production of this plastic [1]
[0] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S002203022...
[1] https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/ghg-per-protein-poore
by david-gpu
3/2/2026 at 4:16:26 PM
It's possible to use manufacture whey protein without cows:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whey_protein#Microbial_product...
It's not theoretical either. You can buy vegan dairy products made from this method today.
by scythmic_waves
3/2/2026 at 4:50:27 PM
I'd be interested in knowing what the CO2 emissions were from these. You still need to feed the yeast, so you'll have the CO2 emissions involved in growing a crop associated with this. And if you look at the chart in the OP, you'll see that grain production is about half the CO2 emissions of milk. That's likely part of the milk CO2 production accounting.In addition, you'll need more cleaning/sterilization/mixing. I'd guess that it's lower, but I wonder how much lower.
And then there's the other products that generally get thrown into the mix to make up for things like missing fats. For example, a vegan cheese based on bacteria will often include coconut oil, probably to get the same fat profile.
Whey is an interesting product in general because it's a waste product of cheese making.
by cogman10
3/2/2026 at 6:12:49 PM
It’s likely to be vastly better.Feed efficiency is critical when doing these calculations as cows inherently need energy to survive not just produce milk. As such even if you use the same crop two different sources of protein can have wildly different levels of CO2 emissions embedded in their creation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed_conversion_ratio
by Retric
3/2/2026 at 7:41:31 PM
I think it is likely more efficient. That said, cows do have the advantage that the food they consume needs little to no processing in order to produce milk. The yeast needs pretty precise processing of the incoming mash both to make sure a wild yeast strain doesn't make it's way in, and to make sure the yeast ultimately produces the right proteins.You can't just throw in grass clippings into a vat and get whey. You can throw grass clippings into a cow to get milk (though, TBF, I dislike grassy milk).
by cogman10
3/2/2026 at 9:53:30 PM
I agree it’s likely to be more labor intensive per lb of feedstock, but only 21% of calories in milk are protein and overall milk has ~10% of the initial energy. So you’re looking at ~2% of the energy from these crops ending up as milk protein.That’s a lot of room for improvement which then means far less labor on growing crops.
by Retric
3/3/2026 at 5:37:32 AM
And you even get CO2-free meat in the end (I mean, if all the CO2 output is attributed to milk production only).by pajko
3/3/2026 at 2:01:40 AM
Cows are pretty terrible because of methane from their burps (not farts; burps). People are working on that but it's still real. A 50% drop would be very significantby DonsDiscountGas
3/2/2026 at 7:19:54 PM
I am very much sympathetic to nature conservation, decarbonization, degrowth etc. but really, there are more important considerations at this very moment than shaving few kgs of CO2 by ditching milk.And, as much as some powers try to convince us, not everything can be reduced to carbon footprint.
by wolvesechoes
3/2/2026 at 4:16:59 PM
But we can also produce milk from yeast now. Perfect Day, for example, produces milk without cows.So it's not out of the question we could scale that up to meet plastics demand.
by ahhhhnoooo
3/2/2026 at 6:08:36 PM
Is this going to result in net less greenhouse gas emissions?Maybe but probably not zero, from parents article: "The use of such treated fertilizers will be most relevant for reducing the carbon footprint of milk in countries such as the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the Netherlands, where N fertilizer is a major contributor to the footprint."
In case you are unaware much of the nitrogen in plant matter (food for yeast or cows) comes from fertilizer. And that is extracted using the Haber process (see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process ). This runs on natural gas, because it's effectively a waste product of other hydrocarbons being extracted.
by zer00eyz
3/2/2026 at 5:00:08 PM
[flagged]by 5o1ecist
3/2/2026 at 5:56:27 PM
Language changes. In this case just the spelling though."Almaund mylke" is all over medieval cookery manuscripts, among other options.
We’ve been using milk for non-animal products for longer than we’ve spelt milk with an i, and for longer than we’ve had companies, let alone multi-billion-dollar ones.
by systoll
3/2/2026 at 5:18:36 PM
To be clear, Perfect Day doesn't make "milk" like plant-based milks (think almond "milk", oat "milk", etc). They bioengineered some yeast to grow whey protein directly. The milk they make (made?) probably wouldn't be considered "milk" in the strict sense (they had to get the fat and sugars from plants), but there's really not a good reason to distinguish between "whey protein from cows" and "whey protein from yeast" when it's the same stuff.by OkayPhysicist
3/2/2026 at 5:45:46 PM
You understand that the product I'm talking about is the same proteins as milk, and is essentially whey, right?I'm not talking about grinding up nuts or grains and calling it milk, I'm talking about engineering yeasts to literally produce the proteins that milk has to create a product that isn't just milk-like, but is literally identical proteins.
by ahhhhnoooo
3/2/2026 at 7:40:29 PM
Whey is just a small part of milk, though. You can't isolate one aspect and pretend it's fair to call it (cow) milk.You wouldn't call whey protein powder mixed in water milk.
You wouldn't call butter mixed with water milk.
You wouldn't call casein powder mixed with water milk.
by tredre3
3/3/2026 at 6:13:28 AM
You are correct. Thankfully I never said anything of the sort.I said proteins, plural. The s is a key indicator I was talking about more than one aspect.
Milk is about 5% lactose, 3.5% casein (80%) and whey proteins (20%, almost entirely two specific sub proteins), and 3-4% fat. A negligible amount of minerals. Nonfat milk, which I think we'd both recognize as milk (unpalatable as it may be). Lactose free milk is milk, I think. One assumes lactose free nonfat milk is milk.
So if one is producing the three primary proteins, you've got nearly the whole way there. There's some trace proteins you are missing, but if you are 99.99+% of the way to milk, you've got milk. You sure the milk you get from the store hasn't denatured those trace proteins?
by ahhhhnoooo
3/2/2026 at 5:21:52 PM
The large diary producers are forcing things that everyone understand what is — “Oat milk” and “Almond milk” — to be called “Oat drink” and “Almond drink”. New terms for things that have existed for decades.Really, we should be calling the OG milk “cow milk” and let the good times roll.
Big milk have been pushing questionable health research and narratives for cow milk for quite some time.
All this coming from someone (me) who drinks 0,5L of cow milk every day.
Yes, yeast milk is milk too. Just like coconut milk.
by qff
3/2/2026 at 6:07:52 PM
I thought the reason things are called "Oat Drink" versus "Oat Milk" is because non-dairy "milks" have to be fortified with vitamin D and calcium and the stuff that's labeled a "drink" is not fortified.by throwway120385
3/4/2026 at 7:34:59 AM
I don't know about the rest of the world, but in EU you can't write "milk" on the packaging unless it comes from cows/goats/sheep/etc. Also, you can't name it "honey" or picture bees or honeycombs on the packaging unless it's genuine honey from bees.The solution is to write better laws and stop opposing regulations.
by M95D
3/2/2026 at 6:36:56 PM
The first documented use of the word coconut milk in English dates from 1698 ( Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, volume 20, page 333) and the use of almond milk goes quite a bit further back, to at least 1390 (The Forme of Cury).by vlabakje90
3/2/2026 at 4:47:22 PM
Where are these emissions coming from? For instance, if this is counting the emissions involved in logistics, none of that inherently or necessarily requires greenhouse emissions—you can electrify trains, tanker trucks, and refrigerators.If this is counting the methane emissions of the cow itself, that’s not a fair or complete accounting. The cow produces methane in her digestive system after eating grass, and the grass grows by, among other things, extracting CO2 from the air. Then the cow burps methane, the methane combines with atmospheric oxygen and breaks down to CO2 and water, and you have a closed loop; the cow cannot belch more carbon than she eats, and that carbon came from the air in the first place.
by philwelch
3/3/2026 at 9:46:39 AM
Methane traps far more heat than CO2 before oxidizing back into it.by psjs
3/3/2026 at 3:58:12 PM
That doesn’t change the fact that you’re selectively counting only one side of a closed loop process. Methane may be a more efficient greenhouse gas than CO2 but if that effect dominated, we would expect to see the global warming trend start with the evolution of ruminants, not the Industrial Revolution (a time when the North American ruminant population actually declined a significant amount!)by philwelch
3/2/2026 at 4:13:01 PM
But to put this in context, the average American family’s carbon footprint per year is roughly 50,000 kg, and one flight is usually on the order of >1,000 kg, or ~300kg/700 pounds of milk, assuming that 3kg CO2 per kg milk high end figure. So if you like milk, there are probably other places you can cut first.Does seem like a lot of carbon for a kg of plastic, though, how does that compare to normal plastic’s carbon footprint?
by ericd
3/2/2026 at 4:19:38 PM
>... >1,000 kg, or 700 pounds of milkWhy do you mix your units like that.
by beAbU
3/2/2026 at 5:07:03 PM
Because I'm American, so I use metric in scientific contexts, and weird medieval units in everyday ones :-)I'll edit a bit for clarity for you all who live in more consistent places.
by ericd
3/2/2026 at 10:01:58 PM
I'm not above asking the barber to leave an inch on the top, but then I'm not going to ask him to leave 15mm on the sides. At least keep the system consistent within a sentence :)by beAbU
3/3/2026 at 1:06:19 AM
lol fair enough.by ericd
3/2/2026 at 11:46:48 PM
Oh how convenient. We discovered a clean alternative to oil and now suddenly you have a few “concerns” about the environmental impact of… milk.But oil? That’s fine of course. Completely natural stuff.
by MagicMoonlight