Hallo eco-aware viewers 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today in the first of 
a two-part series, we 
focus on the devastating 
effects of floods 
on people and our planet.
Floods occur when 
enormous amounts of 
water partially or fully 
inundate land surfaces 
through such events 
as excessively heavy 
rainfalls, cyclones, 
tsunamis, storm surges, 
icesheet and glacier 
melting, and so on. 
Experiencing 
a serious flood can be 
a truly terrifying 
experience, as conditions 
are ever-changing 
and uncertain. 
Is it safe to drive 
through a flooded street? 
Can one walk through 
the high waters and 
not encounter dangerous 
sharp objects or worse, 
lose footing and 
be swept away 
by the swift currents? 
Will people be able to 
survive the time 
without access to 
clean water and food?
In its numerous reports, 
the United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change 
(IPCC) has observed that 
around the world 
there have been 
widespread increases 
in heavy rainfall events, 
even in places where 
the total amount of rain 
received annually 
has been decreasing. 
Prominent scientists 
everywhere point to 
global warming 
as the reason for this 
worrisome phenomenon.
Climate change 
researchers have found 
that animal agriculture 
is overwhelmingly 
responsible for the 
warming of our planet. 
This harmful activity 
releases immense 
quantities of lethal 
greenhouse gases and 
the industry is also 
the primary cause of 
the majority of 
the world’s deforestation 
and land degradation.
The alterations to 
the planet’s atmosphere 
and land surfaces 
from livestock raising 
have wreaked havoc on 
the natural interactions 
between ecosystems and 
the hydrological cycle.
Climate models cited in 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change 
reports project that 
deleterious human actions
such as factory farming 
which elevate the amount 
of greenhouse gases 
in the air will mean 
a continual upward trend 
in the number of 
violent weather events in 
many parts of the world, 
including those marked 
by excessively 
heavy precipitation.  
Rising sea levels caused 
by climate change 
worsen the effect of 
storm surges and other 
similar weather extremes 
in coastal areas by 
increasing the chances 
that an inundation 
will occur.
What's more, 
in the past 30 years over 
2.8 billion people have 
been affected by floods 
worldwide, 
with over 95% of them 
residing in Asia. 
Last year 
hydrological disasters 
were the most frequent 
type of natural disaster 
comprising over 53% of 
all such events globally. 
Of the 180 reported 
hydrological disasters 
worldwide, 149 were floods
and 31 were 
wet mass movements 
like landslides, with 
over 57.3 million victims.
Compared to 2008, 
the number of persons 
affected 
increased by 27.4%. 
The continent with 
the largest occurrence of 
floods in 2009 was Asia.
ASIA
From July 11 to 17, 2009 
unusual torrential rains 
hit Sichuan and Hunan 
provinces and Chongqing 
Municipality in China, 
triggered frightening 
floods and landslides. 
Nearly two million 
people were affected, 
and at least 17 perished.
On July 25, 2009 seven 
cities and other parts of 
Hunan were flooded, 
affecting 1.3 million 
people, with at least 
12 fatalities, 3,200 
homes collapsed and 
14,000 others damaged.
Typhoon Morakot struck 
Formosa (Taiwan) 
on August 7 and 8, 2009 
triggering severe floods 
and landslides. 
Many roads and bridges 
were swept away, 
stranding thousands 
in places like remote 
mountain villages.
At least 121 people 
perished, 45 were injured 
and more than 
50,000 troops worked 
to rescue some 15,000 
stranded persons. 
Floods deeply impact 
families, homes 
and livelihoods. 
Widespread crop damage 
caused by flooding 
can have an immensely 
negative effect 
on a nation’s ability to 
feed itself, and injures 
social welfare and 
a country’s economy. 
In September 2009
high tides flooded
the Mekong Delta regions 
in Âu Lạc (Vietnam). 
Thousands of hectares 
of vegetable crops were 
submerged in salt water 
in the provinces of 
Cà Mau, Kiên Giang 
and An Giang 
along with buildings 
that were flooded in 
the region’s largest city 
of Cần Thơ. 
Landslides also occurred 
in many sections
 of Cà Mau’s eastern 
coastline as well as 
along 40 meters of levees 
in An Giang province, 
with trees that 
were swept away 
by huge wave surges. 
Losses endured by
the region in 2008 due to 
climate change resulted 
in over 100 fatalities 
and damage to more than 
30,000 hectares 
of rice fields. 
Incessant downpours 
triggered floods 
from August 19
through August 21, 2009 
and affected hundreds 
of villages in eastern 
Nepal’s Jhapa district. 
Eight people lost 
their lives, 
and over 6,000 families
were displaced as 
hundreds of homes were 
damaged or swept away 
and over 1,000 hectares
of crops were destroyed.
Unusual rains in early
September 2009 
triggered floods in 
Laghman and Nangarhar 
provinces of 
eastern Afghanistan. 
At least 15 perished and 
several hundred homes, 
agricultural land and fruit 
trees suffered damage.
Numerous makeshift 
shelters in and around 
the Somali capital of 
Mogadishu were swept 
away in late October 2009 
after two days 
of downpours 
triggered flash floods. 
Thousands of persons 
displaced by civil war 
lost everything 
and were foodless.
Some 6,000 families, 
or 36,000 people, in the 
southern coastal city of 
Kismayo faced
similar conditions, 
making them vulnerable 
to mosquitoes and rain. 
When we return, we will 
continue our examination 
of the ruinous effects of 
climate change-induced 
flooding. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
This is Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television 
where we are focusing on 
the disturbing trend 
of increased flooding 
worldwide 
due to climate change. 
Major floods can 
devastate infrastructure, 
thereby hampering rescue 
efforts and the delivery 
of much needed aid 
to those caught 
in the rising waters. 
In late December 2009
Lebanon struggled
through floods 
and disruption. 
Heavy rainfalls and 
high winds caused 
widespread flooding 
across Lebanon, 
particularly in the Beirut 
and Mount Lebanon 
regions. 
Extreme traffic congestion 
was noted as 
roads became impassable 
due to high waters 
or landslides. 
Some schools were 
also evacuated as
the water found its way 
into buildings.
Government ministries
and other agencies
worked fervently together 
to bring relief 
to the affected. 
Torrential rains in 
September 2009 caused 
loss of life for two people 
in the Mexican capital 
of Mexico City 
as heavy rainfall flooded 
20 neighborhoods 
and city officials 
evacuated 1,500 people 
from their homes. 
Four subway stations also 
became inoperable 
due to flooding, and 
cars on some streets 
were found floating in
up to one and a half meters 
of water. 
Floods surprised
Australian residents
in mid-January 2010.
In what is normally 
a dry central region, 
torrential rains 
caused stranding of 
hotel visitors as well as 
closure of highways 
and rail service. 
A family of five 
was found and rescued 
via helicopter 
several days after 
they had tried to drive 
through the floodwaters. 
Devastating deluges 
can mean the fast spread 
of water borne diseases. 
In tropical and 
sub-tropical regions 
across the globe 
dengue fever threatens 
the lives of flood victims. 
It is transmitted 
by mosquitoes that 
reproduce quickly in 
pools of standing water.  
Dengue fever
is marked by high fever, 
vomiting, rashes, nausea 
and other serious 
symptoms and there is 
no known treatment. 
The World Health 
Organization estimates 
that annually 
50 million people are 
infected worldwide. 
Malaria, another disease 
transmitted by mosquitos, 
is also of serious concern 
following flooding. 
One million children 
in Africa died in 2008 
due to this disease. 
In addition, diarrhea 
which can be fatal to 
very young children, can 
occur if water supplies 
become contaminated 
by the flood waters.
THE MIDDLE EAST
On Wednesday, 
November 25, 2009 
some of the worst rains 
in years caused flooding 
in the western port city 
of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
on the Red Sea. 
At least 48 people 
perished and 
900 had to be rescued 
from stranding as 
buildings and vehicles 
were submerged 
in several meters 
of floodwaters. 
Downpours also struck 
the holy city of Mecca, 
where some 2 million 
Muslim pilgrims 
were on the annual 
hajj pilgrimage at the time.
More than 70 of the flood 
victims contracted 
the swine flu virus, 
with four succumbing 
to the illness.
In October 2009, 
Kenya was overcome by 
unexpected floods due to 
heavy El Niño rains, 
causing at least 
two fatalities and 
displacing 500 families 
in the coastal Magarini 
District as homes and 
vast fields of crops 
were destroyed. 
Following the disaster, 
affected resident 
Jillo Galgalo stated, 
“Most pit latrines have 
been washed away 
because nobody expected 
any floods to occur 
this soon. 
We are in dire need of 
clean water because 
most water points are 
now filled with 
all sorts of waste, 
including human waste 
and cow dung.”
Another heartbreaking 
reality is that animals, 
like humans, also 
fall victim to unrelenting 
downpours and floods. 
Animal companions may 
be left behind in homes 
with no food or water 
in the rush to evacuate. 
If there is no higher ground, 
animals living in fields 
such as horses may 
have nowhere to turn 
with rising flood waters.
Heavy monsoon rains 
that began in early July 
2009 triggered a flood 
in the Barpeta District 
of Assam, India, causing 
people and animals to 
perish, with over 
half a million villagers 
affected as many lost 
their bamboo homes.
On September 21, 2009
the southeastern US state 
of Georgia was inundated 
by downpours, 
causing creeks and rivers 
to burst their banks. 
At least 10 people and 
four canine companions 
lost their lives 
as metro Atlanta and 
surrounding areas were 
flooded, forcing hundreds 
to evacuate their homes. 
Georgia Insurance 
Commissioner 
John Oxendine estimated 
US$500 million in losses 
were incurred 
in the region and 
over 20,000 homes 
and buildings were 
substantially damaged.
The floods that we have 
recapped today are just 
a small fraction of these 
climate-change induced 
events that 
have occurred recently. 
While endeavors to 
forecast floods to prevent 
loss of life and property 
are becoming more
fine-tuned, and though 
emergency responders 
give their utmost 
to safeguard 
their communities, 
truly the best way to 
save precious lives from 
future natural disasters
is to prevent them 
in the first place. 
The key step for all 
to take right now 
is the adoption of 
the eco-conscious 
organic vegan diet which 
will dramatically reduce 
greenhouse gas emissions, 
end deforestation, restore 
habitats and quickly 
end climate change. 
Our planet’s 
weather patterns 
will again stabilize and 
flooding will no longer 
be a concern.
Earth-wise viewers, 
thank you 
for your company 
on today’s program. 
Please join us 
next Wednesday 
on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home for 
part two of our program 
on floods. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening 
Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May all lives be filled 
with heavenly bliss 
and abundant love.
Welcome, 
eco-conscious viewers, 
to Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today we present 
the second episode 
in our two-part series on 
the catastrophic impact 
of floods on humankind 
and our planet.
Floods occur when 
enormous amounts of water
inundate land surfaces 
through such events 
as excessively heavy 
rainfalls, cyclones, 
tsunamis, storm surges, 
melting of icesheets 
and glaciers, and so on. 
In its numerous reports, 
the United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change 
(IPCC) has observed 
there have been 
widespread increases 
in sudden heavy rainfall 
events around the world,
even in places where 
the total amount of rain 
received annually 
has been decreasing. 
Prominent scientists 
everywhere point to 
global warming 
as the reason for this 
worrisome phenomenon.
Climate change 
researchers have found 
that animal agriculture 
is overwhelmingly 
responsible for the 
warming of our planet. 
This harmful activity 
releases immense 
quantities of lethal 
greenhouse gases and 
the industry is also 
the primary cause of 
the majority of 
the world’s deforestation 
and land degradation.
The alterations to 
the planet’s atmosphere 
and land surfaces 
from livestock raising 
have wreaked havoc on 
the natural interactions 
between ecosystems and 
the hydrological cycle.
Thus far in 2010, 
floods have caused 
grievous suffering 
to humans and animals, 
as well as utter devastation 
to property, crops 
and the environment. 
During this period, 
China has been 
the most severely 
flood-affected nation 
in the world. 
CHINA 
APRIL 2010
Floods occurred 
on Friday, April 17th in 
Altay City 
of Alakak County 
affecting over 500 homes, 
blocking roads and 
damaging property. 
In southeastern Jiangxi 
Province, the rainy season 
arrived half a month 
early, forcing hundreds 
of people to evacuate 
as torrential precipitation 
drenched 45 counties. 
Central China’s
Hunan province 
was inundated with 
an average rainfall of 
112 millimeters 
for a week beginning 
on April 17th, causing 
the Xiang River to rise
by up to six meters, with 
nearly 300 embankment 
breaches reported. 
Officials said that 
the resulting floods 
claimed one life 
in a landslide and caused 
property loss for more 
than 900,000 people
as the waters swept 
through 27 counties, 
collapsing at least 4,600 
homes and submerging 
nearly 40,000 hectares 
of farmland. 
MAY 2010
Starting on the evening 
of May 5, forceful rain, 
hail, winds, 
and a rare tornado 
with gusts of up to 
112 kilometers-per-hour 
impacted the provinces of 
Sichuan, Chongqing, 
Guizhou, Jiangxi, 
Guangdong and Hunan. 
The storms set off 
mud-rock slides and flash 
floods and threatened to 
breach reservoirs 
as water levels in rivers 
swelled and burst levees.
According to the Office 
of State Flood Control 
and Drought Relief 
Headquarters 
2.55-million residents 
were affected with 
nearly 10,000 homes flattened
and 100,000 hectares 
of arable land ruined.  
The central government 
allocated 
US$4.5 million to help 
with recovery efforts in 
Chongqing Municipality, 
where 31 fatalities 
were reported. 
Torrential precipitation 
on May 31st 
flooded 27 counties 
in Guangxi Zhuang 
Autonomous Region, 
causing landslides. 
More than 
80,000 evacuated as 
thousands of homes and 
nearly 78,000 hectares 
of crops were devastated.
JUNE 2010
The Chinese government 
reported on Saturday, 
June 12th that abnormally 
heavy seasonal flooding 
across 21 provinces 
caused at least 155 
fatalities, with 1.3 million 
people uprooted
as 140,000 
homes collapsed and 
two million hectares of 
crops were affected. 
As of Friday, June 11th, 
direct economic losses 
had reached US$6.5 
billion, an amount 
nearly four times higher 
than in the previous year. 
According to the Chinese 
Ministry of Civil Affairs, 
199 people had succumbed 
since mid-June 
to the relentless rains and 
floods that swept through 
10 southern provinces, 
with 123 still missing
as of Tuesday, June 22nd. 
The extreme weather 
affected over
29 million people, with 
2.37 million displaced 
after 195,000 homes 
were destroyed and 
568,000 were damaged.
At the end of June, 
heavy rain throughout 
southern China caused 
hundreds to perish. 
In Jiangxi province, 
at least 100,000 people 
residing along the Fu
River were left to rely on 
aid after the Changkai 
levee was ruined 
amidst the region’s 
worst floods in a century. 
Many of my seedlings 
were drowned, which 
means I won’t have any 
crop harvest this year.
This used to be the 
main road in the village 
which led to the levee. 
After it was broken, 
all the water flowed 
in our direction 
along the road. 
Now some parts of this 
road are filled with sand. 
Here, for example, 
where it is lower, it is 
also submerged and 
cars can’t drive through.
I am standing at the site 
of the levee breach 
in Changkai Township, 
Fuzhou City, Jiangxi, 
which is the most 
severely damaged area. 
Hallo, can you tell us 
about the situation at 
the time of the flooding?
At that time, we had four 
or five successive days 
of rain, with daily 
accumulated rainfall 
amounting to 
over 100 millimeters. 
This is the site where
the levee broke. 
This is the Fu River. 
The soldiers have helped 
to evacuate 100,000 
people away from here. 
When we return, 
we’ll continue our review 
of destructive 
climate change-induced 
floods that have occurred 
thus far in 2010. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
This is Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television, 
where we’re featuring 
part two of our presentation 
on the severe effects 
of floods on humanity 
and the environment.
The colossal damage and 
pain caused by the floods 
during 2010 
have profoundly affected 
the Chinese people. 
The nation joined together 
in August to honor 
some of those 
who were casualties 
of natural disasters.
On Sunday, August 15, 
Chinese leaders, students, 
workers and overseas 
nationals honored 
1248 brethren who had 
lost their lives as well as 
the some 500 
still missing from the 
recent massive mudslides 
and floods in Zhouqu 
County of northwest 
China's Gansu province. 
In Beijing, President 
Hu Jintao led top Chinese 
government officials 
in a three-minute 
silent tribute, while 
more than 5000 rescuers 
and villagers stood 
on the mudslide debris 
at Dongjie Village 
in Zhouqu, and 
approximately 10,000 
gathered at a city square 
in Lazhou. 
All entertainment 
activities were also 
suspended across 
the country as part of 
the commemoration.
Other areas of the world 
have also experienced 
relentless, frightening 
floods in 2010, 
with an enormous toll 
taken on families, homes, 
livelihoods, crops 
and animals. 
COLOMBIA
May 2010
At least 18 people died
and 87 were injured 
when waves of torrential 
rains pummeled southern 
Colombia 
at the end of May. 
Floods and landslides 
uprooted thousands 
across 134 municipalities
as 15,000 homes 
were damaged. 
We completely lost all 
that was in our homes 
and lost everything, 
completely all, 
because of the mud...
We suffer because 
we don’t sleep, 
we don’t eat in peace.
The biggest thing,
the boy is lost …
the rest of it, well, 
you get it anyway. 
And I thank you so much 
that you do not leave us 
so helpless like this. 
And thank you.
INDIA
July 2010
At the beginning of July,
two people 
lost their lives and 
over 200,000 were displaced 
throughout 400 villages 
as floods massively
disrupted the state of 
Assam, India. 
Thunderstorms 
smashed homes,
and uprooted trees and 
electric and telephone poles. 
The region’s Kaziranga 
National Park 
has also been deluged 
by the swollen 
Brahmaputra River, 
forcing scores of already 
endangered animals, 
including rhinos and 
elephants, to retreat to
nearby hills for safety. 
YEMEN
July 2010
At least 30 people 
succumbed to
days of continuous rainfall
that resulted 
in flooding and landslides 
across Yemen’s  
northwestern regions 
on Wednesday, July 14th. 
Seven perished when 
a vehicle was swept away 
in the Mashanna district 
of Ibb province, 
while a rock slide 
in Dhamar province 
collapsed a dam, 
leading to flooding 
that took five lives 
and injured four others, 
while submerging 
a health center, 
farms and roads. 
Floods caused fatalities 
in two refugee camps, 
where some 200 families 
were displaced, 
while in the capital 
Sana’a, roads were 
blocked by rising waters 
that also flowed into 
residents’ homes.
POLAND/GERMANY/
CZECH REPUBLIC
AUGUST 2010
At least 14 people 
died after 
torrential rains triggered 
inundations in the border 
regions of Poland, 
Germany and 
the Czech Republic 
on Saturday, August 7th. 
Several towns and 
villages were completely 
isolated, while homes, 
cars, and bridges 
were destroyed, with 
thousands more houses 
losing electricity. 
In northern Czech 
Republic, at least 1,000 
people were evacuated, 
including residents 
in areas below two dams 
that threatened to burst 
as water levels rose, 
as well as 
three summer camps. 
In the towns of Chrastava 
and Frýdlant, police 
and military helicopters 
saved people stranded on 
the roofs of their homes. 
Hundreds of German 
and Czech firefighters 
worked side-by-side 
to lessen water levels 
submerging a major 
international railway line 
connecting Prague, 
the Czech Republic 
and Berlin, Germany.
Meanwhile in Poland, 
another 2,000 people were
evacuated by firefighters
via boats, assisted by
emergency workers from
neighboring Germany as
the southwestern 
town of Bogatynia was 
inundated following 
the overflowing of the 
Miedzianka River, which 
destroyed several homes 
and displaced 700 people. 
ETHIOPIA
AUGUST 2010
As flooding swept through 
Ethiopia’s north-central 
Amhara Region, 
19 people were reported 
to have lost their lives on 
Wednesday, August 25th, 
with nearly 9,000 evacuated
to safer ground. 
The floods followed 
over a month of 
unusually heavy rains, 
which also 
submerged or washed 
away more than 6,000 
hectares of crops. 
Three lowland districts 
were especially affected 
as rivers swelled in the 
hills of Oromiya zone, 
and over 53,000 households
in five other zones 
were affected. 
Regional governments 
and aid agencies such as 
the United Nations 
World Food Program and 
World Vision 
assisted with shelter 
and emergency aid, 
while extended family 
members also 
offered their care. 
While many 
praiseworthy efforts 
are made by governments 
and non-governmental 
organizations 
around the world 
to save people’s lives 
and provide them with 
immediate assistance, 
provisions and care, 
the one sure thing that 
can help prevent all these 
unforgiving catastrophes 
is the harmonious, 
compassionate, 
organic vegan diet. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
often conveys this simple 
message to the world.
My heart is troubled 
every day, 
thinking of all
these innocent people and 
all the defenseless animals 
who have to suffer 
in this great upheaval 
we call climate change. 
But we still have time.
We could not reverse the 
effect of climate change 
in the past. 
Whatever happened due 
to typhoons and floods 
and earthquakes, etc., 
we could 
not reverse the effect. 
But we could 
stop future disasters 
by returning 
to the compassionate 
vegetarian diet 
and encouraging others 
to do the same. 
The government 
has the power to do this. 
I beg all the governments 
of the world, please, 
do this before it’s too late,
for the sake 
of your citizens and 
your own children as well. 
Thank you, caring viewers, 
for joining us 
on today’s program.  
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we soon 
have a world full of 
bliss and tranquility.