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British government favors veg diet for reducing greenhouse gases.
The nation’s Food Safety Agency (FSA) contracted the University of East Anglia to investigate how climate change may affect food safety and nutrition. The recently released report “Food and Climate Change” concluded that a low Greenhouse Gas (GHG) diet would include reduced meat and cheese along with higher
amounts of vegetables, and protein from pulses, also known as legumes. 

The report also noted that increased consumption of legumes would have other health benefits, stating, “If pulses are used more widely as a protein source in place of meat and dairy foods there may be nutritional benefits, such as those associated with vegetarian diets.

There is (also) evidence that soy protein may be beneficial in reducing prostate cancer risk and improving lipids.” Many thanks, Food Safety Agency, University of East Anglia and United Kingdom, for sharing your findings that diets rich in vegetables and plant proteins are good for the body and the environment.

May governments and individuals alike take such recommendations to heart and act now to restore our planet.  In her tireless care for the Earth and all its inhabitants, Supreme Master Ching Hai has frequently highlighted the need to eliminate meat consumption, as during a March 2009 videoconference in Mexico.

Supreme Master Ching Hai : The livestock raising, means animals raising, emits the greenhouse gas of methane, the most of it. And this gas is up to 72 times more potent than carbon dioxide, but it also dissipates much more quickly than carbon dioxide –  means CO2. So, the vegetarian diet, the vegan diet, the animal-free diet, is one way to physically and quickly reverse the greenhouse gases that are damaging our planet because it will cause an immediate cooling effect. If all governments encourage people toward the healthy, animal-free diet, the planet could be saved in no time.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/foodanddrinknews/8079534/Go-vegetarian-to-save-planet-scientists-
tell-Government.html
http://www.foodbase.org.uk//admintools/reportdocuments
/575-1-1008_X02001__Climate_Change_and_Food_Report__28_Sept_2010.pdf
http://www.foodnavigator.com/Science-Nutrition/Climate-change-could-provoke-unhealthy-food-choices-warns-
FSA-report
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1322704/Go-vegetarian-order-Government-food-police.html

New study demonstrate positive effects of conservation.
As delegates from 192 countries concluded their gathering at the UN biodiversity summit in Japan, discussions focused on how to reverse continued species loss, including the protection of 587 sites to preserve 920 species on the brink of extinction. A bright spot appeared at the conference when the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Chair of Species Survival Commission Dr. Simon Stuart revealed that worldwide conservation efforts have been successful, saying that the current losses would be far worse without them.

Affirming overall progress, he stated, “History has shown us that conservation can achieve the impossible… But this is the first time we can demonstrate the aggregated positive impact of these successes on the state of the environment.” 

Bravo, Dr. Stuart, International Union for Conservation of Nature and all organizations and individuals striving to protect natural habitats and their residents. May such noble efforts continue, so that we may halt further loss and preserve the wondrous co-inhabitant creations that grace our Earth.

http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-10-nature-backbone.html
http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/enviornment/save-587-sites-to-save-life-urge-scientists_100450247.html
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/la-sci-biodiversity-20101027,0,7290736.story

A recent climate report by the South Eastern Australian Climate Initiative notes a long-term trend toward drier conditions in the region, with factors that include an unprecedented recent 13-year drought along with a seasonal pattern of rainfall decline.

http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-10-climate-australian-south-east.html
http://indymedia.org.au/2010/10/24/csiro-south-east-australia-becoming-drier-global-warming-implicated


With reforestation a longer-term goal, Malaysian officials and environmental groups partner to provide an interim solution for endangered orangutans living in isolated forest areas by connecting them with bridges made from recycled materials for the primates to swing or walk across.