Farmers are looking to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions in a weird and wonderful way: using genetically engineered, low-methane sheep.
A project named 'Breed for CH4nge' has been announced in the U.K., pledging £2.9 million—$3.7 million—to breed sheep to emit as little methane as possible, helping farming get closer to net zero emissions.
"We have to move faster in terms of farming being a solution to climate change, and play our part in the UK's 30 percent methane reduction by 2030 targets agreed during COP26 [a U.N. climate change conference]," Phil Stocker, chief executive of the National Sheep Association,—a partner in the project—told the FarmingUK website.