With
 data gathered from 33 countries, the United Nations Environment Program
 (UNEP) report, “Latin America and the Caribbean Atlas of our Changing 
Environment,” outlines the many environmental tolls facing the region 
due to climate change.
Described through more than 200 satellite 
images, maps, tables, graphs and text, the atlas comprises three parts: 
one that explores original diverse ecosystems and species, another 
documenting current climate issues, and finally, an analysis of 65 
specific cases. 
Environmental impacts such as high levels of 
deforestation can be seen in images of Brazil, Mexico, Haiti, Guatemala,
 and Bolivia. Of even greater concern is the fact that many of the lands
 are not being cleared for human food but instead are being tilled for 
crops used in animal feed, industry, and fuel. 
Other noted 
climate effects across the continent include an increase in natural 
disasters, accelerated glacier melt and land degradation such as soil 
and coastal erosion, as well as desertification that currently affects 
more than 600 million hectares in the region. 
Among the 
recommendations made by UNEP are sustainable programs to help halt the 
adverse direction and restore ecosystems. We appreciate the United 
Nations Environment Program for these comprehensive observations, 
despite our alarm at their detrimental effect on the environment. 
Let
 us quickly heed such meaningful scientific data and act now to restore 
balance to our planet. Speaking with concern of climate change's 
perilous consequences during a November 2009 videoconference in Mexico, 
Supreme Master Ching Hai at the same time emphasized the best way to 
safeguard the environment and all life therein. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 Some of the global warming effects that we hear about are a continued 
rise in the Earth's atmospheric temperature, warming of the ocean, along
 with acidification, more frequent and stronger storms, prolonged 
droughts and intensified heat waves, soil desertification, plant and 
animal extinctions, and even melting of permafrost, which could trigger 
massive releases of more methane gas! That would be catastrophic beyond 
an unthinkable scale. Mexico and your neighboring nations have already 
suffered from some of these effects. 
“How is livestock 
production connected to these damaging effects?” you will ask. There are
 so many ways that I'm sure I don't have enough time to tell all of 
them. 
These include deforestation; soil erosion and 
desertification; excessive use of precious resources; land and water 
waste and pollution; and animal, plant and human disease or 
disappearance. 
So, the solution is very simple. We just have to turn away from the animal products. We stop eating meat, dairy, eggs, fish. 
Then
 everything will improve, life will be easier, and we can rest knowing 
that our children will have a future to look forward to. 
http://news.mongabay.com/2010/1228-morgan_latin_atlas.html, 
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/sci/2010-12/14/c_13648264.
http://presszoom.com/story_163152.html,