Eructations from farm animals account for a fifth of all global emissions of methane, and are blamed by doomsters for driving the planet towards climate catastrophe. This greenhouse gas that is less plentiful but far more potent than the most notorious culprit, carbon dioxide (CO2). Chewing over the problem, scientists at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) believe a new vaccine can help protect Earth from the ruminant menace, 'New Scientist' reports.
A vaccine against three species of microbe which produce methane in sheeps' stomachs reduced methane belches by 8 per cent in a 13-hour test.
The formula is only a prototype, for the scientists believe they can wack more of the remaining species of microbe, which together account for 80 per cent of sheep methane.
Methane is 23 times more potent volume-for volume than CO2 in its ability to trap heat from the sun. It is responsible for a fifth of the enhanced greenhouse effect over the past 200 years.
The gas is released into the atmosphere from agriculture, landfill and mining as well as from natural wetlands. CO2 is mainly disgorged into the atmosphere from burning oil, gas and coal.
Greenhouse gases are so called for their ability to hang in the atmosphere like an invisible shroud, trapping solar heat instead of letting it radiate out into space.

Clever Aussies, just what we really, desperately need . . . I wonder if they can come up with something similar for men . . . and dogs . . .
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I'd rather have a full bottle in front of me than a full frontal lobotomy!