Greetings,
eco-conscious viewers
to today’s episode of
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
June 5th is
World Environment Day,
a day established by
the United Nations in 1973
to raise global awareness
of the vital importance
of preserving
of our biosphere.
This year’s theme
is “Many Species.
One Planet. One Future.”
In honor of this day,
our program features
excerpts of interviews
with respected
climate scientists,
prominent political figures,
knowledgeable
environmental specialists,
and concerned citizens
regarding how intensive
animal agriculture
devastates our environment.
According to
"Livestock’s Long Shadow,”
a report
released in 2006 by
the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO)
of the United Nations,
the livestock industry
is chiefly responsible
for almost all
the very serious
environmental issues
currently facing the planet,
including land degradation,
deforestation, water
pollution and shortages,
and above all,
global warming.
We begin
with how production
of animal products
takes up huge tracts of land
across the globe
and thus robs humanity
of the true productivity
of the soil.
The whole operation
of the meat system
requires a lot of land.
There is a whole bunch
of agricultural land
somewhere
making the food
to grow those animals.
We’re all connected
together, we live
on the same planet;
we do one thing,
it affects everybody.
And this is a very
important illustration.
The livestock sector is
by far the single largest
anthropogenic user
of land.
Livestock production
accounts for 70%
of all agricultural land
and 30% of the world’s
surface land area.
And 70% of
previous forested land
in the Amazon is occupied
by cattle pastures,
and crops for animal feed
cover a large part
of the remainder.
Forests everywhere
play a crucial role
in absorbing atmospheric
carbon dioxide.
Deforestation
due to livestock raising
erases these
priceless carbon sinks.
Animal agriculture is the
driver of land clearing
around the world,
particularly in Australia.
Of the hundred million
hectares of Australia
that’s been deforested,
about 70 million of that
has been down
to animal agriculture.
About 25, 26 million
is what we crop (farm).
We only live on about
2 million hectares.
In places like Brazil,
suppose they stop
producing meat,
they won’t need to burn
a lot of rainforest to
turn them into grassland
for animal farming.
They can then
preserve the rainforest
and let them
continue to grow.
This can prevent the
CO2 emissions coming
from burning rainforest,
which is very important.
Production
of animal products
is inherently inefficient.
It drains
enormous amounts of our
precious natural resources
such as water and
diverts food crops away
from the hungry
in order to feed
factory farmed animals
instead.
Other environmental
impacts of livestock: The
amount of water needed
to produce one kilogram
of maize is 900 liters,
rice, 3000 liters,
chicken, 3900 (liters),
pork, 4900 (liters),
and beef, a whopping
15,500 liters.
So it’s also intensive
in the use of water if
you take the entire cycle.
One-third of the
world’s cereal harvest
and over 90% of soya
is used for animal feed.
It takes
close to 10 kilograms
of animal food to produce
1 kilogram of beef
and 4 to 5.5 kilograms
of grain to produce
1 kilogram of pork, and
2.1 to 3 kilograms of grain
to produce 1 kilogram
of poultry meat.
Indeed, there is
a lot of water that goes
into producing
a kilogram of beef
and a lot of water
also goes into producing
dairy products.
Much dairy in Australia
is conducted on lands
that wouldn’t actually be
suitable for dairy except
for irrigate agriculture.
So this is water
that is piped from
the Murray (River)
and sprayed over
vast areas of pasture
to produce sufficiently
green pastures
to produce milk.
But that’s the same water
that’s in desperately
short supply in Adelaide,
that’s killing
the Coorong (wetlands),
for instance,
because it’s not getting
enough water flow.
These are being sprayed
onto the green fields
of Western Victoria
to produce dairy.
It’s not actually
a very sensible use
of water at all.
I would say that
it is an issue that is
quite important and we
need to grapple with it,
that producing protein
from livestock
is extremely consumptive
as far as
water requirements, to
produce the same amount
of protein from meat
compared to legumes;
I think it’s on the order
of seven or eight times
more energy is required
to produce that.
In other words,
it is quite costly
for natural resources
and energy consumption
to produce beef.
So, as far as
environmental
responsibility,
I would say that livestock
has been shown to be
quite energy intensive,
water intensive
and land intensive;
converting forest
into pasture land,
we’ve changed much
of our landscape.
In fact, agriculture alone
has changed
the landscape
of the planet more than
any other driver.
So I would advocate
getting off of the meat diet,
that it really is not
sustainable.
The global biodiversity
crisis is closely related
to the rapid growth
of the livestock industry
in recent decades.
We, human beings
are living things; we
came into existence and
evolved in living systems
as part of
the ecological systems.
Every time we reduce
the amount of biodiversity,
we basically impoverish
our own future.
We need to really
think about ecosystems
and biodiversity across
the face of the planet.
And we also need to
think about maintaining
representative natural areas
that are of sufficient size
that they continue
to be representative.
That was the idea
of a minimum critical size
of ecosystems, and
how big should a part be
in order to really
be representative.
If we fail to do this, it’s a
pretty unattractive future,
not only for the rest of life
but for human beings.
When we return, we will
continue to examine
the harmful effects
of the livestock industry.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
It is important to
make people aware that
their meat consumption is
an important contributor
both to climate change,
but also to the food crisis
in the world.
Welcome back to
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
here on
Supreme Master Television.
As June 5th is
World Environment Day,
today’s program
discusses intensive
animal agriculture’s
severe detrimental impacts
on our environment
and climate.
Factory farms
severely pollute
streams, rivers and lakes,
where the drinking water
becomes contaminated
with nitrates
and phosphorus
from the manure.
Residents around
such operations suffer
from respiratory illnesses
from the fouled air.
I must admit
that I have much more
frequent diarrhea
in the spring time or
when the water is dirty,
when the river water
gets brown.
If I drink too much water
out of the faucet,
there's a good chance
I have a diarrhea
the next day.
I went to the annual
Public Health Day
and I saw a study
about people getting sick,
getting diarrhea, because
of living near either
pig farms or cattle farms.
We cannot breathe.
It’s the ammonia.
We lack air.
There have been days
when we had to leave.
We leave in the morning,
we return in the evening
when the winds have
changed direction.
Livestock raising
for meat production is
the single largest emitter
of humane-produced
methane, a very potent
greenhouse gas.
It has 72 times
the warming potential of
carbon dioxide measured
over a 20-year period.
Methane in particular,
is produced by ruminates
when they digest
their food.
We have
90 million sheep
and 28 million cattle
in this country.
They are 24/7
methane-producing
machines.
The amount
of warming that
that methane creates
in Australia is
more warming than
all of our coal-fired
power stations.
It’s absolutely staggering.
The change
in animal farming is
actually more effective
than controlling
CO2 emissions, because
the lifetime of CO2
in the atmosphere is
very long, it could be
from 50 to 200 years.
So, even if
the whole world stopped
emitting carbon
completely, it would still
take us 50 to 200 years
to see any
significant results.
But, methane is different;
the lifetime of methane
in the atmosphere
is only 15 years.
So, if we can reduce
methane emissions
from today, the results
would emerge
in our generation.
So the effect is
very fast, very direct.
Retired
World Bank Group
lead environmental advisor
Dr. Robert Goodland
and research officer and
environmental specialist
for the Group’s
International Finance
Corporation division
Jeff Anhang
in their article “Livestock
and Climate Change” -
that was published in
World Watch Magazine
concluded that
the livestock production
cycle and supply chain
produce at least 51 percent
of human-caused,
global greenhouse-
gas emissions.
They recommend adopting
a plant-based diet as
the first-choice solution
to climate change.
All of these things
are connected and so
we see a strong need
to help to move to
reduced meat consumption
as part of a response
to climate change,
as well as all the other
good reasons for doing it,
to do with health,
to do with obesity,
all the other things
that we know about.
We can also
take other steps,
such as changing our diet.
Those of you who are
vegans, and have chosen
to avoid animal products
completely, then
you’re already taking
a major step to reducing
your own footprint
in terms of reducing
your carbon emissions
from your diet.
A study by the Netherlands
Environmental
Assessment Agency
entitled “Climate Benefits
of Changing Diet,”
analyzed the entire chain
of animal-raising activities
from field to fork.
It calculated that
the US$40 trillion cost
to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions
and to take other
climate change-related
mitigation measures to
halt the global warming
could be reduced by
up to by 80% if the world
adopted a vegan diet.
We assumed
that the grasslands
that were not used
by cattle anymore
would go back
to their natural state.
For that reason,
several parts of the world
will grow forests and
retain carbon in terms
of more woodland.
As the best and
most effective answer
to the climate crisis,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has advocated
organic vegan farming
and adoption of
the plant-based diet,
as highlighted
in an October 2009
climate change conference
in Formosa (Taiwan).
Without the needless
animal industry, not only
will we gain forests,
we can also have
organic vegan farmlands
to grow real, decent food
for humans,
and like the forests,
these farmlands
can also absorb
a lot of heat
from the atmosphere.
And a global shift
to organic vegan practices
could mean 40%
of all greenhouse gases
absorbed as well, apart
from the 50 plus percent
that we eliminate
through the terminating
of the animals raising
practice.
World governments
could save tens of trillions
of US dollars,
if everyone be veg
and plant organic.
So you see, 50% less from
no more animal industry,
40% less carbon dioxide
from organic farming,
then we will be singing,
our world will be saved.
Our sincere thanks go to
all those featured on
today’s program for their
insightful perspectives
on the livestock industry
and its destruction
of our environment.
Following an organic
vegan diet is the simplest
and quickest way to
heal our Earth and prevent
runaway climate change
from occurring.
We wish all viewers
a very splendid
World Environment Day.
Thank you for joining us
on Plane Earth:
Our Loving Home.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment
after Noteworthy News.
May we all
be noble-minded
and have life-saving
compassionate hearts.