Green viewers,
this is Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
Currently
the global economy
is highly unstable.
The economies
of many nations are
struggling enormously,
with the US
experiencing its worst
economic downturn since
the Great Depression
of the 1930's.
Citizens from developing
and developed countries
are strongly calling
on their respective
government leaders
to urgently help them
obtain jobs as well as
feed, clothe and
house their families.
Even the world's
wealthiest nations
are facing financial
challenges in terms of
helping the growing
numbers of people who
need social assistance.
These current fiscal
realities are making it
much harder
for governments
to make progress
in addressing crucial
global environmental threats
such as climate change.
The health of our planet
is so dire some scientists
are predicting
an enormous world
population decline
within this century
or even the extinction
of the human race.
With the consequences
of inaction so great, these
environmental challenges
must be addressed now
in spite of
budgetary constraints.
Fortunately there is hope.
On today’s program,
we will examine
an affordable approach
to mitigating
the planet's most pressing
ecological hazards.
For approximately
the past 10,000 years,
known as the Holocene era,
the climate has been
relatively stable and
Earth's natural regulatory
systems have provided
ideal conditions for
human and animal life
to flourish.
But we have now
entered a new period,
referred to as
the Anthropocene era,
in which deleterious
human activities
are severely damaging
these very same systems
necessary for life
to continue on Earth.
In 2009,
a group of 28 globally
recognized experts
in environmental and
earth-systems science
was assembled by the
Stockholm Environment
Institute in Sweden.
The group identified nine
“planetary life support
systems” that humans
are pushing to the limit,
or in some cases surpassing.
Urgent issues requiring
immediate action
include biodiversity loss,
ocean acidification,
ozone depletion
in the stratosphere,
freshwater scarcity,
excess nitrogen
production, harmful
land-use changes,
climate change, black
carbon in the atmosphere,
and chemical pollution.
The continued viability
of these essential
life support systems
has dietary choice as
a common denominator.
A global switch
to the organic vegan diet
can quickly and
effectively address
all of these issues.
DEFORESTATION
AND OTHER HARMFUL
LAND-USE CHANGES
Land in its natural state
provides many
ecosystem services,
including the production
of oxygen, regulation
of the water cycle,
and sequestration
of carbon dioxide.
Throughout history
unsustainable
deforestation has been
a major factor
in the collapse of
many great civilizations,
including ancient
Sumeria, Babylonia,
and Assyria,
as well as the Roman
and Mayan empires.
Historically agriculture
has been the largest
driver of land use change
with livestock raising
being the modern era’s
single most
destructive activity.
The United Nations
Food and Agriculture
Organization estimates
that globally 30%
of all land mass and 70%
of all agricultural land
is currently used
for livestock production,
either for grazing or to
raise food for the animals.
A 2010 United Nations
Environment Programme
report estimates that
the livestock industry
is responsible
for nearly 70% of the
environmental problems
attributed to land use change.
Although most efforts
to halt deforestation
focus on
stopping logging,
the United Nation’s
Global Forest Resource
Assessment data shows
that clearing forests to
create grazing pastures
and grow animal feed is
responsible for 60 to 80%
of all forest razing.
Furthermore,
deforestation itself
exacerbates climate change
by releasing
approximately 20% of all
annual human-induced
CO2 emissions.
Dietary change is
the most important tool
we have at our disposal
for reversing this trend.
Far more can be grown
in a much smaller space
if humans consume plant
instead of animal foods.
In a study
examining the most
green and efficient means
of feeding the residents
of the state of New York,
USA, lead author
Dr. Christian Peters
concludes,
"A person following
a low-fat vegetarian diet,
for example, will need
less than half (0.44)
an acre per person per year
to produce their food.
A high-fat diet with
a lot of meat,
on the other hand,
needs 2.11 acres."
BIODIVERSITY LOSS
A United Nations report,
"The Economics
of Ecosystems and
Biodiversity" estimates
species loss and injury
to ecosystems from
human activity costs
the world between
US$2 to US$4.5 trillion
annually, or about 7.5%
of the value of the global
gross domestic product,
which is a measure
of all goods and services
produced worldwide.
The situation is so severe,
we have entered
what is being called
"the sixth great
extinction event"
with the current rate of
biodiversity loss 1,000
to 10,000 times
higher than the natural
background extinction rate.
In the Food and
Agriculture Organization
of the United Nation’s
2006 report
“Livestock’s Long Shadow,”
the link between
large-scale species
disappearance and
the livestock industry
was emphasized:
“Indeed,
the livestock sector may
well be the leading player
in the reduction
of biodiversity, since
it is the major driver of
deforestation, as well as
one of the leading drivers
of land degradation,
pollution, climate change,
overfishing, sedimentation
of coastal areas and
facilitation of invasions
by alien species.”
A paper by the Netherlands
Environmental
Assessment Agency
evaluated the benefits
of various policy tools
for reversing declining
biodiversity.
Comparing eight
different policy options
to reduce
an assumed baseline 10%
global biodiversity loss
between 2000 and 2050,
including
protecting natural areas,
managing forests better,
and humanity
adopting a meatless diet,
the animal-free diet was
found to best safeguard
species survival out of
all the possible choices.
The two best solutions
to end species extinction
are the implementation
of sustainable, vegan
organic farming practices
globally and
humanity embracing
the plant-based diet,
both of which will free
up large amounts of land
to be returned
to their natural,
life-sustaining states and
end animal agriculture’s
massive consumption
of resources.
WATER SCARCITY
In 2009,
the World Water Forum
warned that the planet
is in the midst of a water
"bubble" due to
unsustainable use, and
that the consequences
would be far graver
than the current
global financial crisis.
The Forum also warned
that within the next 20 years,
over 50% of
the world's population
will face water shortages,
leading to
millions of deaths and
increasing conflicts over
dwindling resources.
There are multiple causes
for water scarcity,
including the enormous
water footprint of
animal products,
pollution of fresh water
sources by livestock
operations and factories
and accelerating
climate change, which
causes more droughts.
The quickest and
most effective way to
improve water security
is changing
the agriculture industry,
as currently 70% of
all freshwater resources
are allocated
to this sector globally.
Turning livestock farmers
into vegan organic growers
would transform
the situation dramatically
for the better.
Research has repeatedly
demonstrated that the
most water efficient diet
is a plant-based diet.
The Twente Water Center
in the Netherlands
estimates it takes up to
six times more water
to grow a kilogram
of animal protein
as plant protein and that
producing beef consumes
20 times more water
per calorie than grain
or potatoes.
OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
In the Netherlands
Environmental Assessment
Agency report
"Climate Benefits
of Changing Diet,"
the authors conclude
that a vegan diet would
reduce the overall costs
of addressing
the consequences of
climate change by over 80%.
According to
their calculations,
the combined effects of
halting deforestation and
reforesting land currently
used for livestock would
reduce CO2 emissions
from deforestation,
while growing trees
would capture the CO2
already in the atmosphere
and sequester it.
The US-based
Rodale Institute estimates
that if all of
the world’s tillable land
were converted
to organic farmland,
the soil would absorb and
store approximately 40%
of current CO2 emissions.
The United Nations
Environment Programme
has called increasing
ocean acidification
a real threat
to the future viability
of marine ecosystems.
The combination of
lowering CO2 emissions
through conversion to
vegan organic farming,
decreasing deforestation
and capturing carbon
already in the atmosphere
would help protect
our seas by lessening
acidification, which is
caused by excessive
amounts of CO2 being
sequestered in them.
EXCESS NITROGEN
& STRATOSPHERIC
OZONE DEPLETION
Industrial agriculture
uses tremendous amounts
of nitrogen-based
fertilizers and livestock
operations generate
huge quantities of
animal manure
which is full of nitrogen.
This excess nitrogen
pollutes drinking
water supplies, destroys
biodiversity and produces
dead zones in oceans.
The US
National Oceanographic
and Atmospheric
Administration
has concluded that
nitrous oxide is the main
cause of the growth
in the ozone hole
over Antarctica.
The primary sources
of nitrous oxide are
nitrogen-based fertilizers
and animal manure.
Again global adoption
of the plant-based diet
would mean the end of
the volumes of manure
produced annually and
the planet’s embracing
of vegan organic farming
would spell the end of
industrial fertilizer usage.
CLIMATE CHANGE
AND BLACK CARBON
There is a growing
recognition in the climate
science community that
halting climate change
by focusing exclusively
on lowering carbon
dioxide emission levels
will not be enough
to keep global warming
at or below 2 degrees Celsius,
a goal originally
agreed upon at the 2009
United Nations Climate
Change Conference in
Copenhagen, Denmark.
Geophysical sciences
professor David Archer
of University of Chicago,
USA points out that
relying on
CO2 reductions alone
to stop climate change
is insufficient because
CO2 from fossil fuels
and other sources
can continue to remain
in the atmosphere,
heating the planet
for thousands of years.
A 2011 report issued
by the United Nations
Environment Programme
and the World
Meteorological Organization
concludes that
the combined effect
of reducing levels
of methane, ground level
ozone and black carbon
is about equal to the
warming effect of CO2.
However, in contrast
to carbon dioxide, all of
these are short-lived
climate forcers, meaning
they dissipate from
the atmosphere much
more quickly than CO2.
Methane is dispersed
from the air in about
a decade’s time, black
carbon within weeks,
and ozone within hours.
An organic vegan diet
is the best solution
to halt climate change,
because livestock are
the single largest source
of human-caused
methane, and methane
is a building-block
to ozone.
Forest and
savannah burning,
the number one source
of black carbon globally,
is largely driven
by livestock raising.
Thus ending livestock
production will lead
to huge declines
in emissions of these
short-lived climate forcers.
Some have suggested
mitigating methane emissions
through a technology
called methane capture.
However this supposed
solution is fundamentally
flawed.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
commented
on this technology during
a press conference
held in Cancún, Mexico
in December 2010.
And when we say
we raise the animals
“organically” or capture
methane from manure
to reduce emissions –
these methods also
fall exceedingly
short of expectation.
Even in the case of
capturing methane
from animal manure,
three times that amount
is still being released
from the livestock
digestive process.
Plus, this technique
cannot be considered
clean energy at all,
when the same factory farm
is destroying
the environment
in a dozen other ways.
We would like to close
by recognizing that
for individuals, choosing
an organic plant-based
lifestyle over a diet
centered on meat,
dairy, and eggs is
the single most impactful
action anyone can take
to improve the health
of our planet's
vital life-support systems.
For governments,
re-directing all
current subsidies for
animal product producers
to vegan organic farmers
is a budget-neutral way
to significantly reverse
the most pressing
environmental challenges
of our time.
Thank you for joining us
for Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
here on Supreme Master
Television.
May we forever
respect and honor
our planetary abode.