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Supreme Master Ching Hai on the Environment:
The Best Way to Restore the Biodiversity of Our Planet - P3/5
Compilation of Supreme Master Ching Hai's lectures
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Livestock raising is
responsible for countless
adverse environmental
effects, each of which
further aggravates
global warming.
According to
the United Nations
and other studies,
livestock raising is known
to cause the following
devastating effects:
1. Deforestation:
Livestock raising
is the single largest
human use of land,
and the main reason
for deforestation.
Since 1970,
livestock production has
been responsible for
90% of the Amazon
deforestation,
to clear land for pasture
and grow animal feed crops.
A rainforest area the size
of a football field
is destroyed every second
to produce just
250 hamburgers.
Scientists warn
that if we continue
on this damaging path,
the Earth’s forests
will soon stop absorbing
greenhouse gases,
and instead will start to
release huge quantities of
carbon dioxide (CO2).
Moreover, deforestation
for livestock activities
also produces black carbon.
Black carbon is
a greenhouse particle
that is 680 times
as heat-trapping as CO2,
and causes the ice sheets
and glaciers around the
world to melt even faster.
Up to 40% of black
carbon emissions come
from burning forests
for livestock.
2. Soil erosion
and desertification:
Over 50% of the world’s
soil erosion is caused
by livestock, which along
with deforestation
leads to desertification.
3. Biodiversity loss:
Livestock is the leading
cause of animal and
plant extinction due to
land degradation and
other habitat-destroying
effects.
The livestock industry
is killing off our beautiful
wildlife, including
Mexico's own.
4. Deadly pollution:
Of all sectors,
the meat industry
is the biggest source
of water pollution.
Excessive and unregulated
animal waste,
chemical fertilizers,
pesticides, antibiotics,
and other livestock-related
contaminants
choke our waterways
and create oceanic
dead zones, such as
the massive one
in the Gulf of Mexico.
5. Disease:
Over 65% of
human infectious diseases
are known to be transmitted
by animals.
The filthy and
inhumane conditions
of factory farming
harbor lethal bacteria
and viruses such as
avian and swine flu,
which we all know is
a pandemic continuing
its global deadly toll.
6. Food waste:
Livestock uses up to
12 times the amount of
grain as the same amount
of vegetable protein.
About 730 million tons
of the world’s grain
harvests are used to
produce animal protein.
This could feed
all the hungry people,
numbering 1 billion
in the world,
and many times over.
7. Water waste:
It takes over 1,200 gallons
of water to grow
1 serving of beef, but
only 98 gallons of water
for one complete,
nutritionally balanced
vegan meal.
While 1.1 billion people
lack access to
safe drinking water,
we waste 3.8 trillion tons
of precious clean water
each year for
livestock production.
8. Energy and
Resource waste:
Animal products require
8 times as much
fossil fuel energy to be
produced, compared
to vegetable products.
A study found that meat
and dairy production
in Mexico use the most
agricultural supplies and
resources in the country,
and this is reflected
elsewhere around
the world as well.
All the evidence speaks
so loud and clear.
If these resources –
land, water, and grain –
were turned instead
towards the direct support
of human life instead of
livestock,
what a different world
we would have.
Respected climate
scientists including
Dr. James Hansen of NASA,
Dr. Carlos Nobre
of Brazil’s
National Institute
for Space Research, and
Dr. Rajendra Pachauri,
head of the UN
Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change
(IPCC) – all have stated
that reducing
meat consumption
or becoming vegetarian
would be an effective
solution to global warming.
That is, we have to live
an animal-free lifestyle,
a compassionate lifestyle.
Thirty years ago,
my husband and I decided
to become vegetarian
based on the principle
of respect for life
and non-violence.
Today,
doctors recommend us
not to abuse them
for health reasons.
Additionally,
we are finding out that
this excessive consumption
not only negatively
affects human health but
the health of the planet
as well.
When a hamburger
arrives on my table,
what does it involve
in terms of climate change?
There are a lot of
scientific reports made
about the costs
of meat eating,
so I’m sure you are asking
for the sake of people
who may not be aware.
So, please,
allow me to state
some of the costs of
what we are dealing with
for the next time
one is about
to eat a hamburger.
The cost of a hamburger
appears to us as cheap,
but without
the enormous subsidies
involved in
the meat industry,
the real monetary cost
of a hamburger
would be much higher,
much higher,
at least US$12.
There are so many costs
and resources involved
for that one hamburger
that you are asking about,
from the field
to the plate,
and all the processes
in between.
From burning
the precious forests to
growing the corn and soy
to feed the cows,
to making the fertilizer and
watering these feed crops,
to giving the cows
huge amounts of
healthy land and water,
hormones and antibiotics
are also forcefully fed
to the cows,
and we will eat all that.
Then, the transport
over long distances
here and there and finally
to the slaughterhouse,
to freezing the meat
so that it does not rot
as it is supposed to,
then finally,
it has to be cooked
before reaching the plate
- and cooked well
because, for example,
the US Department
of Agriculture found
that 89% of
beef hamburger patties
contained traces of
the deadly E. coli bacteria.
Eighty-nine percent
of the beef hamburger
contains traces of E. coli.
There is more that goes
in the hamburger than
what you think you see.
Here are just
a few examples.
Destruction of land:
First,
land must be cleared
to raise the cows.
For one hamburger,
there are 55 square feet
of destroyed
tropical rainforest,
which is an equivalent
of 75 kilograms of CO2,
or driving your car
for 5 days straight.
Also, biodiversity loss.
In the process, we lose
up to 30 plant species,
100 insect species –
I mean the beneficial one
as well - and dozens
of birds, mammals, etc.
Now,
it contributes to hunger.
Some of
the deforested land
is used to grow grains.
Oftentimes, poor families
are forced off their land
in the process.
One hamburger costs
4 pounds of grain
that was consumed
by the cow - that’s
about 3 loaves of bread
or 8 plates of spaghetti
that could have fed a
number of hungry people.
So, another cold cost
of a hamburger
is human starvation.
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