Greetings, 
intelligent viewers.
On today’s program, 
we’ll go to the media to 
review, degree by degree, 
climate change impact 
scenarios of the future 
that necessitate urgent 
drastic action today. 
Then, we’ll look at 
two more articles on 
how effective mitigation 
can and must take place.
At the recent 
United Nations 
Climate Change
Conference that just ended 
in Cancún, Mexico, 
leaders focused on 
the goal of 
keep the global 
average temperature rise 
below 2 degrees Celsius 
to avoid most serious 
climate change impacts. 
This includes 
the 0.7 degrees increase 
already reached 
since pre-industrial times. 
Others, however, 
called for even stronger 
greenhouse gas reduction 
goals to keep warming 
below 1.5 degrees. 
Researchers tell us 
that we are on track to a 
4 degree temperature rise 
by 2060 and 
6 degrees by 2100. 
What do these 
temperature increases mean?
How do they translate 
to changes 
we can see around us?
Award winning 
British author Mark Lynas
is a specialist 
on climate change 
who wrote three books 
on the subject: 
“High Tide: News 
from a Warming World,” 
“Carbon Calculator,” 
and “Six Degrees: 
Our Future 
on a Hotter Planet.” 
Mr. Lynas’s book 
“Six Degrees” 
won the prestigious 
Royal Society Prize 
for Science Books and, 
along with “High Tide,” 
are listed on 
the “Environment top 25 
of all time” bestseller list. 
“Six Degrees” 
was also the basis of 
a television documentary 
by National Geographic.
The following is 
Mr. Lynas’ article 
which was written for 
“The Guardian,” 
a UK-based 
major newspaper, 
on April 14, 2009, 
a slightly updated précis 
of the book, “Six Degrees: 
Our Future 
on a Hotter Planet.” 
The article is titled, 
“Climate Change 
Explained: The Impact 
of Temperature Rises.” 
“Less than 2C
Arctic sea icecap 
disappears, leaving 
polar bears homeless 
and changing 
the Earth’s energy balance 
dramatically as 
reflective ice is replaced 
during summer months 
by darker sea surface. 
Now expected by 2030 
or even earlier.
Tropical coral reefs 
suffer severe and repeated 
bleaching episodes due to
hotter ocean waters, 
killing off most coral and 
delivering a hammer blow 
to marine biodiversity.
Droughts spread through 
the sub-tropics, 
accompanied by 
heatwaves and 
intense wildfires. 
Worst-hit are 
the Mediterranean, 
the south-west 
United States, 
southern Africa 
and Australia.
2C-3C
Summer heatwaves such as 
that in Europe in 2003, 
which killed 
30,000 people, 
become annual events. 
Extreme heat sees 
temperatures reaching 
the low 40s Celsius 
in southern England.
Amazon rainforest 
crosses a “tipping point” 
where extreme heat 
and lower rainfall makes 
the forest unviable – 
much of it burns 
and is replaced by 
desert and savannah.
Dissolved CO2 
turns the oceans 
increasingly acidic, 
destroying 
remaining coral reefs and 
wiping out many species 
of plankton 
which are the basis of 
the marine food chain. 
Several meters 
of sea level rise 
is now inevitable as 
the Greenland ice sheet 
disappears.
3C-4C
Glacier and snow-melt 
in the world’s 
mountain chains 
depletes freshwater flows 
to downstream cities 
and agricultural land. 
Most affected are 
California, Peru, Pakistan 
and China. 
Global food production 
is under threat 
as key breadbaskets 
in Europe, Asia 
and the United States 
suffer drought, 
and heatwaves outstrip 
the tolerance of crops.
The Gulf Stream current 
declines significantly. 
Cooling in Europe 
is unlikely 
due to global warming, 
but oceanic changes 
alter weather patterns 
and lead to 
higher than average 
sea level rise in 
the eastern US and UK.
4C-5C
Another tipping point 
sees massive amounts 
of methane – 
a potent greenhouse gas – 
released by melting 
Siberian permafrost, 
further boosting 
global warming. 
Much human habitation 
in southern Europe, 
north Africa, 
the Middle East and 
other sub-tropical areas 
is rendered unviable 
due to excessive heat 
and drought. 
The focus of civilization 
moves towards the poles, 
where temperatures 
remain cool enough 
for crops, and rainfall – 
albeit with severe floods 
– persists. 
All sea ice is gone 
from both poles; 
mountain glaciers 
are gone from the Andes, 
Alps and Rockies.
5C-6C
Global average 
temperatures are now 
hotter than for 50m years. 
The Arctic region sees 
temperatures rise 
much higher than average 
– up to 20C – meaning 
the entire Arctic is now 
ice-free all year round. 
Most of the topics, 
sub-tropics and even 
lower mid-latitudes are 
too hot to be inhabitable. 
Sea level rise is now 
sufficiently rapid 
that coastal cities 
across the world 
are largely abandoned.
6C and above
Danger of 
“runaway warming,” 
perhaps spurred by 
release of oceanic 
methane hydrates. 
Could the surface 
of the Earth 
become like Venus, 
entirely uninhabitable? 
Most sea life is dead. 
Human refuges now 
confined entirely 
to highland areas 
and the polar regions. 
Human population 
is drastically reduced. 
Perhaps 90% of species 
become extinct, 
rivaling the worst 
mass extinctions 
in the Earth’s 
4.5 billion-year history.
With each added degree 
of temperature, the impacts 
compound in the range 
and extent of devastation. 
Changes can 
occur abruptly. 
How can we stay 
within safe limits 
of planetary warming?
Ecological economists 
at Dalhousie University 
in Canada have undertaken 
one of the most 
holistic analyses to date 
on the effect 
of dietary choices 
on the environment, 
and point to 
an important factor 
in minimizing 
temperature rise. 
The following is an 
excerpt of Reuters’ report 
on the new study, 
by Gerard Wynn, 
London-based journalist 
who has helped coordinate 
Reuters global coverage 
of green business and 
environmental markets. 
Mr. Wynn’s article, 
as published 
on October 4, 2010, 
is titled “Meat Diets Pose 
Environmental Danger: 
Report.”
“People will have to 
cut meat from their diets 
if the world is to stay 
within safer limits 
of planet-warming 
greenhouse gases, 
nitrate pollution 
and habitat destruction, 
according to 
a journal article 
published on Monday.
Experts agree that 
eating plant products 
can be better 
for the environment, 
because 
eating meat involves 
consuming animals 
which are themselves 
raised on plants, 
a less efficient process.
But there is some 
controversy about just 
how far people should 
shun meat 
for vegetables and grains 
to curb damage 
to the environment, 
partly because of 
wide disagreement 
about exactly 
what those impacts are.
Monday's paper 
used coarse estimates 
to argue that, 
on current trends, 
livestock farming 
on its own -- disregarding 
all other human activity –
- would push the world 
near danger levels 
for climate change 
and habitat destruction 
by mid-century.
"We suggest that reining 
in growth of this sector 
should be prioritized," 
said the authors 
from Canada's 
Dalhousie University, 
in their article titled 
"Forecasting potential 
global environmental costs 
of livestock production 
2000-2050."
The paper described 
"a profound disconnect 
between the anticipated 
scale of potential 
environmental impacts 
associated with projected 
livestock production levels 
and even 
the most optimistic 
mitigation strategies."
Solutions to the problem 
included using 
best practice such as 
substituting manure 
for nitrogen fertilizers, 
and increasing 
agricultural productivity, 
said the paper published 
in the Proceedings 
of the National Academy
of Sciences.
But efficiency gains 
would not be enough. 
Per capita 
meat consumption 
would have to be cut.
"Across the board 
reductions in 
per capita consumption 
of livestock products 
should ... be a 
policy priority," it said.”
The new Canadian study 
clearly stated 
that animal product 
consumption must be 
significantly reduced 
as a policy priority. 
But how far should we go 
if we were to avoid 
the dangerous 
climate change scenarios? 
Forbes Magazine’s
Senior Editor 
Matthew Herper 
explored the issue 
through an interview with 
US Stanford University 
biochemist 
Dr. Patrick O. Brown. 
The article, which 
appeared in the global 
business magazine’s 
“Thought Leaders” section, 
had the catchy headline: 
“Drop That Burger: 
Biotech whiz Pat Brown 
makes the global-warming 
case against 
animal farming.”
The following is 
an excerpt:
“Over the next 18 months 
Brown, 55, 
will take a break from his 
normal scientific work 
(finding out how 
a small number of genes 
are translated into 
a much larger number 
of proteins) in order to 
change the way 
the world farms and eats…
Brown, who 
has been a vegetarian 
for more than 30 years 
and a vegan for 5, 
notes that while livestock 
accounts for only 9% 
of human-caused 
carbon dioxide emissions, 
it accounts for 37% of 
human-caused methane 
(most of it emanating 
from the animals' 
digestive systems) and 
65% of human-caused 
nitrous oxide, 
according to the Food & 
Agriculture Organization 
of the United Nations. 
Both are far better 
at trapping heat 
than carbon dioxide, 
meaning that cows, 
chickens and their ilk 
have a larger 
greenhouse effect 
than all the cars, trucks 
and planes in the world.
…Brown brings scientific 
clout to the debate – 
he's a member of 
the National Academy 
of Sciences 
and an investigator 
for the Howard Hughes 
Medical Institute – 
and a realization that 
the arguments for change 
need to be economic, 
not just ethical. 
Growing crops 
to feed animals requires 
a lot more land, energy 
and fertilizer 
than growing them 
to feed people, he says…
"There's absolutely 
no possibility 
that 50 years from now 
this system will be 
operating as it does now," 
says Brown. 
"One approach is 
to just wait, and 
either we'll deal with it 
or we'll be toast. 
I want to approach this 
as a solvable problem."
Solution: 
"Eliminate animal farming 
on planet Earth."
On July 29, 2010, 
“The Guardian” 
published the observation 
of American journalist 
Joseph Mayton, who is 
based in Cairo, Egypt, 
that “Vegetarianism 
is Not Contrary to
Arab Culture.” 
Mr. Mayton explained 
that giving up meat 
in the Middle East 
could solve economic 
and environmental 
challenges, such as 
climate change-caused 
food insecurity. 
Here, Egypt represents 
many other countries 
in a similar situation.
“In Egypt, for example, 
we see that hundreds 
of thousands of cattle are 
imported into the country 
for slaughter; lentils, 
wheat and other staples 
of the Egyptian diet 
are also imported. 
That all costs money.
If Egypt were to promote 
and incorporate 
vegetarianism into 
its economic policy, 
the millions of Egyptians 
who struggle and 
complain about 
the rising costs of meat 
could be fed. 
It takes around 16kg 
of animal feed to 
produce one kilo of meat 
for consumption. 
That's a lot of money 
and food that could serve 
the hungry population.
According to 
Hossam Gamal, 
a researcher at the Egyptian 
agriculture ministry, 
"the exact amount of money 
that could be saved by 
reducing meat production 
is unknown, 
but I have estimated it 
to be in the billions 
[of dollars]".
…By reducing the need 
for meat, he argues, 
"we could, simultaneously, 
increase health of people, 
feed more and increase 
our local economies 
through the use 
of farmland for crops 
that we are currently 
importing, such as 
lentils and beans."
We appreciate 
the journalists and media 
groups around the world 
informing us of the urgency 
of climate change 
as well as 
the necessary and 
most effective solutions. 
Thank you for joining us 
on today’s program. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master
Television for 
Words of Wisdom, 
next after 
Noteworthy News. 
Blessed be your courage 
and wisdom, 
imbued with love.
To read the full articles 
presented, please visit 
the following websites:
“Climate Change 
Explained: The Impact 
of Temperature Rises”
“Meat Diets Pose 
Environmental Danger: 
Report”
“Thought Leaders: 
Drop That Burger”
“Vegetarianism 
is Not Contrary to 
Arab Culture”