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UN reports on the rising impacts of climate change.
The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) has released “Vital Climate Change Graphics for Latin America and the Caribbean,” to help identify effects and make suggestions for mitigation.
The report finds a dramatic increase in the number of people affected by disasters, up from 5 million during the 1970s to 40 million during the past decade, costing an estimated US$40 billion.

Executive director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Center in Belize, Dr. Kenrick Leslie (PhD) spoke of the increased storm intensity in the region.

Dr. Kenrick Leslie - Executive Director, Caribbean Community Climate Change Center, Belize (M): What we have been seeing over the last few years is that the hurricanes are much stronger. In other words, instead of having the categories 1 and 2, we tend to have categories 3, 4, and 5. And they also develop much faster, which means you have less time to give warnings to the public.

VOICE: The report also forecasts that increasing sea surface temperatures by 2050 will bleach corals, leading to decreases in tourism.

Dr. Kenrick Leslie (M): Most of the islands in the Caribbean depend on tourism. So, if you have your coral reefs being damaged, the infrastructure where the hotels are damaged, it means you will have less work for people to do. And hence, it creates a labor problem for people to survive.

VOICE: Dr. Leslie discussed one important countermeasure to avoid climate change's devastating consequences.

Dr. Kenrick Leslie (M): As I said, if we eat less meat: So the governments can say, “What we will do is to find alternative food for the people.” But the people must also recognize that we have a role to play as individuals. So it is the government, people together that will help to make our atmosphere better secured for the future.

VOICE: Our appreciation, Dr. Leslie and United Nations Environment Program for helping governments and people across the globe understand not only the increasing effects of climate change on lives and livelihoods, but also their role as agents of change.

May such efforts as yours push us all to act evermore diligently to avert disasters and to protect lives, first and foremost by adopting a plant-based lifestyle. During a November 2009 videoconference in Mexico, Supreme Master Ching Hai expressed as on many previous occasions her concern for humans' safety amidst worsening conditions as she highlighted at the same time the best way to avoid them.

Supreme Master Ching Hai : The rising intensity and frequency of storms comes from the warming of the ocean which changes weather patterns. L611-635 Like Hurricane Mitch in 1998, which took the lives of nearly 20,000 Central American brethren, as well as Mexican fellow citizens.

In 2007, the southern region once again endured storms and flooding with hundreds of lives lost and hundreds of thousands affected.

climate change is not an abstract concept at all. It is here and now, affecting our neighbors, affecting us, and more and more.

Researchers in the US concluded that eating a vegan diet for a year is more effective at cooling the planet than driving a hybrid vehicle for the same period of time.

Supreme Master Ching Hai: So, the solution is very simple. We just have to turn away from the animal products. We stop eating meat, dairy, eggs, fish. If everyone does this, we will have a transformed world in no time.
http://www.un.org/apps//news/story.asp?NewsID=36973&Cr=climate+change&Cr1=

Royal Botanic Gardens names top ten discoveries of 2010.
A giant tree that towers more than 130 feet tall, found only in the rainforest of Cameroon, is among the top discoveries of botanical discoveries of 2010 as listed by experts at the UK facility in Kew. Though large, the magnificent Magnistipula multinervia is very rare and only four known specimen exist.

Other discoveries from the plant world made by scientists during 2010, the International Year of Biodiversity, include a poisonous aubergine that has been used for generations by local people in Africa to treat infections, and a new species of mistletoe discovered flourishing in a mountain forest in Mozambique.

Keeper of the herbarium at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Professor David Mabberley noted with caution that although there are some 300,000 plants identified thus far, at the current rate of destruction many will disappear without anyone knowing that they ever existed.

Our thanks, Professor Mabberley and all at the Royal Botanic Gardens for sharing these wonders of the natural world. May we all be reminded of to cherish these boundless gifts of beauty and diversity that are bestowed by the Divine.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/8211185/Giant-tree-and-tropical-mistletoe-among-2010s-great-discoveries.html
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-12/rbgk-ntm121710.php

Extra News
Ecotourism Kenya honors visitor destination Sanctuary Olonana in the Masai Mara National Reserve with an Eco Warrior Award for its sustainable practices that respect the environment, including a tree planting project and a wetland wastewater cleaning system.
http://www.etravelblackboard.com/article/112615/aampk-sanctuary-olonana-in-the-masai-wins-eco-
warrior-environmental-award
,
http://www.sanctuaryretreats.com/lodges/news/december-2010-sanctuary-olonana-wins-
ecowarrior-award.cfm


To help protect dugongs and sea turtles in northern Queensland, Australia, a new policy bans hunters from wounding, mutilating or torturing the animals, with penalties that include steep fines and potential prison sentences..
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/12/20/3097700.htm?site=news