Cities have a huge
responsibility in
contributing to bringing
down greenhouse
gas emissions.
Halo loyal viewers, and
welcome to Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
On today's program,
we present the first
in a two-part series
on the crucial role that
cities across our world
are playing in the efforts
to mitigate climate change.
We will learn about
some of the green steps
that mayors, councilors,
and other local leaders
are taking and how
they are encouraging
more eco-friendly ways
of living
among their residents.
Currently 50% of humanity
lives in urban areas,
and by the turn
of the next century,
it is estimated
that up to 90%
of the world's population
will live in cities.
In addition,
cities currently consume
80% of the global
energy supply.
The policies set
by urban governments
can greatly affect the lives
of millions of people.
Decisions made
by our municipalities also
impact the environment
for better or worse and
have a dramatic effect
on the condition
of our biosphere.
Important choices regarding
public transportation
infrastructure, designation
of green spaces,
waste recycling programs,
zoning policies and
building codes, and so on
are typically made
by local governments.
Cities need to lead the way.
Cities have more
flexibility in getting
something done now.
Every individual must
make a contribution.
In this regard,
let’s do all we can.
Over the past few years,
many metros have been
rising to the challenge to
lessen planetary warming
and are courageously
leading the way by making
sustainability a priority.
Let's take a quick look at
what some cities
around the globe
are doing in this area.
Reykjavik,
the capital of Iceland,
has been recognized as
one of the greenest cities
in the world.
Approximately
95% of all buildings
in the metropolis
are heated using
clean geothermal energy
and the city also recently
made hydrogen-run buses
part of its public
transportation system.
Reykjavik seeks
to be completely
fossil-fuel-free by 2050.
Portland, Oregon, USA
is also one of
the most eco-aware cities
on our planet.
More than 30 years ago,
Portland removed
a six-lane highway
and replaced it with a
14-hectare waterfront park.
Today the municipality
has roughly 37,000
hectares of green space
and its 119 kilometers
of bike trails facilitate
walking and biking
to work or school.
It has an urban growth
policy that ensures
the protection
of the approximately
10 million hectares
of forests and farms
that surround it.
Portland was also
the first city
in the United States
to formulate a plan
to reduce its
greenhouse gas emissions.
Japan’s capital of Tokyo
is one of the most
densely populated metros
in the world with
almost 6,000 persons
per square kilometer
and is working diligently
to reduce its release
of greenhouse gases.
Tokyo was recently
selected to take part in
a billion-dollar project
headed by the
Clinton Global Initiative,
an organization started by
former US president
Bill Clinton
to address urgent issues
affecting humanity.
The initiative’s objective
is to reduce CO2 emissions
by increasing
the energy efficiency
of city-owned buildings.
Tokyo has also
committed to planting
200,000 additional trees
in the city center.
Curitiba, Brazil
is seen as a world leader
for its green policies
that are helping
to stem global warming.
After establishing
an innovative
city-bus system,
with dedicated lanes and
super-stretch vehicles,
over 75% of city-dwellers
now take the bus
on a regular basis.
In addition,
70% of Curitiba’s waste
is recycled and there are
over 52 square meters of
green space per person.
According to one survey,
99% of Curitibans report
that they are happy
with their city.
In recent years Kampala,
the national capital
of Uganda, has seen
a great expansion
in the amount of
locally grown produce
thanks to the enactment
of ordinances which
support urban agriculture.
Kampala’s promotion
of city-based cultivation
has not only transformed
the local food system,
it has also inspired
the national government
to adopt a similar
urban agriculture policy
for the entire country.
The production
and consumption
of animal products
is the number one cause
of climate change.
According to researchers,
this enormously
damaging cycle
is the source
of more than 51% of
all human-induced global
greenhouse gas emissions.
Many municipalities,
aware of the relationship
between dietary choice
and global warming,
are developing ways to
encourage their residents
to choose plant-based fare.
In Europe,
Ghent, Belgium, became
the first city in the world
to introduce
a “Veggie Day”
in May 2009.
Every Thursday
schoolchildren in Ghent
are provided
vegetarian lunches
as civil servants
and city councillors
set an example
for all residents by
enjoying vegetarian meals.
Taking a laudable step
forward, on April 6, 2010
the San Francisco Board
of Supervisors signed
a historic resolution
implementing a city-wide
VegDay every Monday,
making San Francisco
the first US city
to officially join
the international
meat-free day movement.
In July 2010,
the first city in all of Africa,
Cape Town,
South Africa,
officially launched
a Meat Free Mondays
campaign
to promote public health,
better animal welfare,
and halt global warming.
City officials
across continents
are working together
to find ways to lessen
the generation
of greenhouse gases.
ICLEI-Local Governments
for Sustainability is an
international association
of local governments
whose primary mission
is to share
innovative ideas about
sustainable development.
With members
from more than
1,200 cities, towns
and counties from
70 different countries,
ICLEI is
the largest association
of local governments
in the world.
We are approaching
a number of tipping points,
particularly in relation to
climate change
and to ocean and
terrestrial ecosystems.
If we pass these points,
corrective action
will both be
immensely expensive and
very probably ineffective.
In October 2010
the group held their
20th anniversary meeting
in Incheon, South Korea
with the theme
“Future of Cities.”
The second day of
the three-day conference
was designated
as Meat-free Day,
and gourmet
plant-based meals
were served to attendees
in recognition of
the environmental
destructiveness
of meat consumption.
Supreme Master Ching Hai,
world renowned
humanitarian, author,
and spiritual teacher
frequently encourages
leaders at every level
to take actions
to save our planet,
as in an October 2009
video message
to a gathering
of magistrates and judges
in Mexico City, Mexico.
At this most urgent time
for the planet, I beseech
your honorable graces to
please help your country
and our world spare lives
from the impending
global warming calamity.
If you don’t,
there will be too massive
a catastrophe,
too immense a suffering
upon people, families,
the children,
that our conscience might
never be able to bear it.
We eliminate most of
the human-made
greenhouse gases
by simply adopting
the animal-free
vegan organic lifestyle.
This also leads
to considerable
financial savings
for world governments.
We cannot wait
for the sustainable energy
and green technology
to be available
and used by everyone.
It would be too late.
We must become vegan
to save our planet.
On November 21, 2010,
one week before the start
of the COP16 Climate
Change Conference,
the World Mayors Summit
on Climate
was held in Mexico City.
Co-sponsored by the
Mexico City government,
the World Mayors Council
on Climate Change,
ICLEI-Local Governments
for Sustainability,
and United Cities
and Local Governments
(UCLG), the Summit
was attended by 3,000
local and regional leaders
including 138 mayors
from 43 nations.
Some of the world's
largest urban metros,
including
Buenos Aires, Argentina,
Johannesburg,
South Africa,
Los Angeles, USA
Paris, France,
Vancouver, Canada
and Jakarta, Indonesia
were represented
at the meeting.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
was invited to attend
the Summit by the
Mexico City government
as a special guest.
Although unable to come
due to her busy schedule,
she sent delegates
to participate in the event
as well as
well-wishing letters
for the organizers and
all distinguished guests
in attendance.
Martha Delgado,
Mexico City’s secretary
of the environment and
ICLEI’s vice president,
stated the following
during the gathering,
“Cities have
great capacities to
address climate change,
even in the absence of
a binding global treaty
among nations, which is
why we are here today.
We are demonstrating
the leadership of mayors
and cities around the world
to take action.”
This opens the door
of a technology
that we’re looking for
to substitute vehicles
that pollute too much.
We want green growth.
We want organic farming
to replace this
destructive agriculture.
At lunch, the Summit
attendees enjoyed
a delicious and nutritious
organic vegetarian meal
graciously provided by
the Mexico City
government.
We offered a vegetarian
and organic menu
for mayors, and we also
took that opportunity
to sensitize their
consciousness about
the meat, the generation
of methane, also the land
that we are losing
because of growing animals.
Both the organizers
and attendees
supported shifting diets
to stop climate change.
I had to be excited
about the lunch
being vegetarian.
There’s got to be
a start somewhere,
and we’ve begun.
It’s much better
to eat vegetarian food
than to eat meat.
Would you be vegan
to save the planet?
Yes, yes.
I am with you on that.
What if we had
a vegan day in Cancún
in the week?
What if, instead of
having just one day,
we have the whole week?
We are having already
in Cancún many more
vegetarian places.
We are supporting
so that in addition to care
for the environment,
there should be care
for the main element,
which is, the human being.
So that we can have
a better city,
a better country.
So that
the world lives better.
Be Veg,
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
At the conclusion
of the Summit,
135 mayors signed the
Mexico City Mayors Pact,
an agreement
to reduce the generation
of greenhouse gases
through local laws
and initiatives.
These benevolent
and caring leaders
also agreed to register
their climate actions
in the Cities Climate
Registry (CCCR)
at the Bonn Centre
for Local Climate Action
and Reporting
and to provide
regular updates
on their progress toward
lessening greenhouse gases
in their respective cities.
The Pact demonstrates
that city officials worldwide
are united in the goal of
stopping global warming.
Their cooperative spirit
is seen as an example for
the global community.
What we’re doing here is
to bring this further
next week to Cancún, and
offer our partnership.
Please join us again
next Wednesday
on Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
as we present
the concluding episode
in this series on
the vital role of cities in
mitigating climate change.
Thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May all beings on Earth
enjoy inner and
outer tranquility.
Halo respected viewers,
and welcome to
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
On today's program,
we present
the concluding episode
of our two-part series
on the crucial role that
cities across our world
are playing in the efforts
to mitigate climate change.
Currently home to
half the Earth’s population,
and consuming 80% of
the world's energy supply,
cities have
a major impact on
our global environment.
The decisions and policies
made by urban leaders
on public transportation,
waste recycling, zoning,
building codes,
and green spaces can
have a dramatic effect
on our biosphere.
Over the past few years,
many metros have been
rising to the challenge to
lessen planetary warming
and are courageously
leading the way by making
sustainability a priority.
They also realize
the many benefits of
working cooperatively
together, and
several global organizations
have formed that serve
as effective platforms for
local government leaders
from around the world
to share their plans, ideas
and successful initiatives.
One of
these organizations is
ICLEI-Local Governments
for Sustainability,
an international association
of municipalities
whose primary mission
is to exchange
innovative ideas about
sustainable development.
With members
from more than
1,200 cities, towns
and counties from
70 different countries,
ICLEI is
the largest association
of local governments
in the world.
Another such group is the
World Mayor's Council
on Climate Change,
an alliance of cities
from across the continents
committed to addressing
the rapid heating
of our planet
and related issues
of global sustainability.
Founded in 2005,
the Council has over
50 members representing
a large network
of local governments
working together
to reduce global
greenhouse gas emissions.
Membership is open to
mayors and municipal heads
and the organization
is currently chaired by
the Honorable
Marcelo Ebrard, mayor
of Mexico City, Mexico.
United Cities and Local
Governments (UCLG)
is yet another global body
with similar goals.
With headquarters
in Barcelona, Spain,
the UCLG has more than
1000 member cities
across 95 countries,
and represent many local
government associations
around the world.
Its mission is to promote
unity and cooperation
among urban and
regional governments,
and to act as a focal point
for the exchange of ideas
and information regarding
a number of issues
of common concern,
including sustainability.
In 2010, these
organizations sponsored
two major conferences
for urban leaders.
From October 5-7, 2010,
ICLEI held
a three-day gathering
in Seoul, South Korea
entitled
“The Future of Cities.”
This global meeting
provided
an excellent opportunity
for municipal heads
to share ideas and plans,
especially in the area
of climate change.
There was solid agreement
among attendees
regarding the need
for cities to focus on
enhanced sustainability,
green policies, and
mitigating global warming.
The production
and consumption
of animal products
is the number one cause
of climate change.
According to researchers,
this enormously
damaging cycle
is the source
of more than 51% of
all human-induced global
greenhouse gas emissions.
Many municipalities,
aware of the relationship
between dietary choice
and planetary heating,
are including the reduction
of meat consumption in
their climate change plans.
To demonstrate
the importance of putting
green ideas into practice,
the second day
of the Future of Cities
conference was declared
to be a “meat-free day,”
to raise awareness
that the vegan lifestyle
is an effective, viable,
and intelligent solution
to planetary warming.
We should try to have
a diet that is thoughtful
about its impacts
on the Earth.
In cooperation with
hosting venue
Songdo Convensia and
the Meat Free Mondays
Korea group,
both a gourmet
vegan lunch and dinner
was served to the delegates.
Lee Hyun-Joo,
the president of
Meat Free Mondays Korea,
informed attendees about
the benefits of nutritious
low-carbon meals.
It is the symbol of the best
solution to climate change,
for the health of the
Earth and its residents.
The fact that people
all over the world
can be happy by sharing
such a diet together
shows our alternative
for the future.
[The speech] was sort of
a total solution,
information for us
to really give up meat.
I like this dish very much,
very delicious.
It looks very tasty
when you receive it,
and secondly
it also is very tasty.
It’s a very important
statement to make
when we say that we are
building eco-efficient
resilient cities, which this
conference is all about.
Abdul Sathar, a member
of the Kurunegala
Municipal Council
in Sri Lanka commented
on how the meat-free day
served as encouragement
to incorporate vegan fare
into his city’s
eco-friendly measures.
We also discussed
in our country also,
we’ll introduce
this meat-free meal.
It’s very nice,
very delicious
and good for health.
Be Veg,
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
Be Veg,
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
A few weeks later,
on November 21, 2010,
city officials
from around the globe
had the opportunity
to meet again,
this time in Mexico City,
for the World Mayors
Summit on Climate.
Co-sponsored by the
Mexico City government,
the World Mayors Council
on Climate Change,
ICLEI-Local Governments
for Sustainability,
and United Cities
and Local Governments,
the Summit
was attended by 3,000
local and regional leaders
including 138 mayors
from 43 nations.
Officials discussed
the urgent need to
address climate change,
including
taking immediate actions
to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions
at the local level.
Supreme Master Ching Hai,
world renowned
humanitarian, author
and spiritual teacher,
has frequently spoken
about the need
for governments
to take leadership
in humanity’s response
to global warming.
In a November 2009
videoconference
in Mexico,
she urged all world leaders
to take action now
to shift their nations
to the cost-effective,
planet-saving vegan diet.
The governments
have the power to make
this urgent transition to
the organic vegan diet.
They should ban
all animal products,
informing people
about the facts of
animal products,
explaining that because
it’s poisoning their
co-citizens and piling up
far more costs than
any gains, economically
and environmentally,
and because it’s eating up
our planet.
According to respected
Dutch scientists, tens
of trillions of US dollars
can be saved by
world governments if all
the world becomes vegan.
In addition, the
governments of the world
have the power
to make the veg trend
an exciting movement
for everyone toward
a healthier lifestyle.
Of course,
climate change is directly
linked with consumption.
I think in the future,
the culture
of vegetarianism,
and of course,
organic production
must be very well
promoted also among
all the countries
and communities.
The implications are
that it is unsustainable.
We can't keep living with
the diets that we've had.
The responsibility
that we have as mayors,
is to inform the citizens,
inform the people out there
with enough information
where they can
make conscious choices.
All of us have to
work together to
give people information
on what the impacts of
their current choices are,
and then what choices
they may have to improve
the status they are in.
In all our schools,
we have the possibility
for the students to choose
between vegetarian food
and some meat or fish.
So every day,
they have the possibility
to choose a better food,
if you look at it
from the climate.
And just a few months ago,
we decided
that once a month we will
only have vegetarian food
in our schools.
We would like to
make the students who say
that they need meat
to choose vegetarian food
and to taste it......
You know, it's much better
to eat vegetarian food
than to eat meat.
The movement just
keeps getting bigger and
it gets bigger because
it's the right thing to do.
It's the right thing to do
for us, it's the right thing
to do for our kids,
our grandkids,
our community,
our country, our globe.
It can be done,
and it will be done,
because it has to be done.
Be Veg,
Go Green,
2 Save the Planet
At the conclusion
of the Summit,
135 mayors signed the
Mexico City Mayors Pact,
an agreement
to reduce the generation
of greenhouse gases
through local laws
and initiatives.
These benevolent
and caring leaders
also agreed to register
their climate actions
in the Cities Climate
Registry (CCCR)
at the Bonn Centre
for Local Climate Action
and Reporting
and to provide
regular updates
on their progress toward
lessening greenhouse gases
in their respective cities.
Currently many metros
around the world
are heeding the call
to respond to our planet’s
climate emergency, and
are actively encouraging
their residents to eat
more plant-based fare.
Vancouver,
one of the largest cities
in Canada, is providing
financial incentives
to help its population
make an important change
in diet.
During 2010, Vancouver,
allocated US$100,000
to support
community plant-based
food endeavors.
These include purchasing
organic produce
from wholesalers in order
to sell at cost price to
people with low incomes.
Neighborhood
composting systems
have also been developed.
Mr. David Cadman, a
Vancouver City Councilor,
as well as President of
ICLEI,
expressed his view
on the shift towards
a plant-based lifestyle.
I think moving towards
a vegan diet
is absolutely essential.
When we look at
the inputs that
go into raising animals,
whether it’s land use,
or whether it’s food,
the corn and grains
that are grown
to feed those animals,
or water consumption,
we cannot continue
to live as dependent
as we are on meat.
If you begin to
transform your own life,
if you become a vegetarian,
if you walk more,
you will be healthier,
the planet will be healthier,
and you will begin to
transform the way in which
we live on this planet.
To close, we would like
to extend many thanks
to the local government
leaders, members
of international bodies
such as the
World Mayors Council
on Climate Change,
ICLEI-Local Governments
for Sustainability,
and United Cities
and Local Governments,
and all others who are
working with earnestness
to mitigate global warming.
We are especially
grateful to those officials
who are promoting the
planet-cooling vegan diet.
May all governments
soon share the good news
about the world-saving
plant-based lifestyle
with their citizens.
Thank you kind viewers
for your company today
on Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
Enlightening Entertainment
is up next
on Supreme Master
Television,
after Noteworthy News.
May our world
and all her inhabitants
always be at peace.