Today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
will be presented 
in Slovenian, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Italian, 
Japanese, Korean, 
Malay, Mongolian, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Slovenian, 
Spanish and Thai.
Greetings, 
eco-wise viewers 
to this week’s episode of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
featuring environmental 
advocate and chemist 
Tomaž Ogrin 
from the Institute 
of Jožef Stefan, Slovenia, 
a prominent research body 
founded in 1949 
and named after 
the distinguished 
19th-century Slovenian 
physicist Jožef Stefan, 
most noted for his work 
on the Stefan-Bolzmann 
law of black-body radiation. 
Currently, the Institute 
employs more than 850 
researchers in the fields 
of physics, chemistry, 
energy utilization, 
environmental science 
and other areas.
Mr. Ogrin is a researcher 
at the Institute 
and manages a project 
that provides youth 
opportunities 
to learn chemistry 
in the laboratory. 
He also oversees 
a continuing education 
program for professionals 
in the field of chemistry 
and other sciences.   
Today we present excerpts 
from our interview 
with Mr. Ogrin who, 
like many others, 
is very worried by the fact
that Earth’s precious 
natural resources are
being rapidly exhausted 
by various destructive 
industries, particularly 
animal agriculture. 
In our talk with him, 
he suggested 
possible solutions 
to this challenge. 
Humans do need 
a necessary quantity 
of water per day, 
desperately need 
a certain amount 
of water per day and 
this water must be clean. 
And here with chemicals 
we have destroyed many 
of the water resources. 
Modern civilization 
has been depleting 
our planet’s wealth 
at an alarming rate, 
putting humanity 
in serious danger. 
A 2010 report by the 
World Watch Institute 
examined the sustainability 
of humankind’s 
consumption patterns. 
It was found that 
in terms of individual use, 
a European consumes an 
average of 43 kilograms 
of natural resources per day 
and an American 
up to 88 kilograms. 
If all people on Earth 
consumed as much 
as the residents of the US 
currently do 
on an annual basis, 
the planet could 
only sustain a sixth 
of its current population.
Finally, the report concluded 
that in total volume, 
the amount of resources 
the world extracts 
from the Earth daily 
would fill 
the Empire State Building, 
a 373 meter high 
skyscraper in 
New York City, USA, 
112 times over.
The world is 
irregularly developed. 
And this is a big problem 
for its survival. 
We need to limit 
the wastefulness 
of Western societies. 
Another query is 
the survival of 
the growing population. 
Here we do not have 
any strategy. 
And actually, 
even if we run out 
of energy resources, 
we do not know what 
will actually follow next. 
Electricity is 
a key component 
of human development. 
The International Energy 
Agency estimates 
1.5-billion people 
in the world still 
lack access to electricity, 
with 85% 
living in rural areas. 
In the past few years 
interest in green energy 
has grown across the world 
as carbon-based fuels 
like oil are highly polluting, 
with a finite amount 
available on Earth. 
The best are 
those power plants 
that directly concentrate 
the Sun’s power. 
Recently they have 
created technology 
that can capture the Sun, 
the solar heat, 
in a substance that melts, 
normally this is a molten 
salt, with a temperature 
of 6-700 degrees (Celsius). 
And this heats water, 
boils it and that steam 
drives a turbine which 
produces electricity 
across the generator. 
This method has proved 
to be the most economical. 
The other 
possible resources 
or the other aspects 
of pumping of heat 
comes from the soil. 
Geothermal energy is 
available in many places 
around the world, 
everywhere, at least 
in smaller quantities. 
All sorts of hot bodies 
emit energy and 
that heats air and water. 
This method is 
fundamentally 
not used enough.
Hydrogen is 
a zero-carbon gas, and 
thus can, to some degree, 
help to curb climate change. 
Those working on 
developing hydrogen-based 
cars and buses use 
an internal combustion 
engine or fuel cells 
to power the vehicles.
If we are talking about 
traffic, we should first 
reduce consumption of 
gasoline and diesel fuel 
with a switch of gas. 
Hydrogen combusting 
with oxygen 
produces water 
and water is certainly 
a clean product. 
It’s not only 
that we do not have 
carbon dioxide anymore, 
there are also 
significantly less or almost 
no dust particles created. 
The problem lies in the fact 
that there is no hydrogen 
on Earth and that 
it needs to be obtained and 
this can be done the most 
elegantly from water. 
In producing hydrogen 
we use energy, 
so we have to 
have power stations. 
With the help 
of electricity it is easy 
to obtain hydrogen. 
And we can burn 
this hydrogen in engines 
with internal combustion 
and we get, 
as we said, water.
The livestock industry 
has a hugely detrimental 
impact on our ecosphere.  
According to a 2010 
United Nations 
Environment Programme 
report entitled “Assessing 
the Environmental Impacts 
of Consumption 
and Production” 
animal agriculture 
consumes 70% of the 
global freshwater supply 
and 38% 
of our planet’s land. 
Feeding all these 
intensively raised animals 
diverts millions of tons 
of grains that could 
otherwise be used 
to sustain humanity.  
In 2008, the Food and 
Agriculture Organization 
of the United Nations 
estimated there are 
over a billion people 
across the world 
that are malnourished.  
We need to reduce 
certain programs, 
particularly those ones 
which are taking 
fertile land from us. 
Because it is our nature 
that we have to 
feed ourselves. 
And fertile soil is 
our solution. 
In this direction 
there is a need for 
a fundamental reduction 
of the number of livestock. 
The livestock also generate 
enormous quantities 
of hazardous manure 
filled with nitrates, 
pathogens and antibiotics 
that destroy life in rivers 
and streams and poison 
drinking water supplies.  
Livestock emissions 
foul the air with 37% 
of all human-caused 
releases of methane, 
a highly dangerous 
greenhouse gas. 
Factory farms also emit 
hydrogen sulfide, 
which can cause death 
from just one inhalation 
at concentrations as low 
as 1,000 parts per million 
and ammonia, a chief cause 
of acid rain and 
ecosystem acidification.
Methane is a gas 
which is very similar 
to natural gas. 
The majority of natural gas 
consists of methane. 
This gas also springs up 
into the atmosphere. 
Its efficiency 
in global warming 
is 72 times more potent 
than carbon dioxide. 
Actually, livestock is 
a huge polluter 
of our atmosphere 
and a major cause for
warming of the planet. 
That is why 
it is extremely important 
that we restrict livestock 
as soon as possible.
Other gases 
from a (factory) farm 
include ammonia, 
which is at the same time 
also toxic. 
This one is mixed with 
other waste products, 
as well as nitrous oxide. 
The problem is that this 
gas is even more effective 
at warming the atmosphere, 
and it is 300 times more 
troublesome and dangerous 
in our atmosphere. 
Likewise, in this case 
we would reduce 
the quantity of this gas 
by reduction 
of livestock breeding.
A subsequent gas, which 
also arises in the field 
of livestock breeding, 
is H2S (hydrogen sulfide). 
This is a gas which is toxic 
in very small quantities. 
Of course it also 
springs up from industry, 
however also 
from livestock breeding. 
Even this one contributes 
a very negative impact 
on the atmosphere, 
above all on the health 
of local residents.
Methane dissipates 
from the air 
after about 12 years, 
whereas carbon dioxide, 
another greenhouse gas, 
stays in the atmosphere 
for thousands of years. 
Lessening the production 
of human-caused methane 
and other shorter-lived 
greenhouse gases can help 
rapidly cool our planet. 
To reduce the methane 
in our atmosphere, 
and prevent 
runaway climate change, 
a worldwide shift to 
the organic vegan diet 
needs to occur now.
Some parts of the world, 
let’s say in India 
are on that path 
from the beginning. 
We need to 
copy their concept. 
That is the so-called 
vegetarian diet. 
The vegetarian diet 
has been proved by many 
expert-established indicators 
to be a healthier form 
of nutrition. 
Not only is it healthier, 
but also a human 
can experience 
more years (of life), 
can be active 
several more years, 
and contribute more 
with his own work. 
This benefit is also 
indicated in 
the acquisition of land, 
which previously 
had livestock, 
and is now available 
for growing harvests 
for human consumption. 
And also water resources 
are significantly increased 
if the livestock lessens. 
Quite soon, 
it is necessary to convene 
an international meeting 
and agree on the reduction 
of livestock breeding. 
In Europe 
we have some initiatives 
in this direction. 
In Ghent, Belgium, 
they initiated 
one day without meat. 
Also in Bremen, Germany 
and also in Slovenia, 
we know organizations 
that have already 
advocated it
in their municipality that 
we also should initiate 
a day without meat.
To conclude 
today’s program, 
sustainable use 
of our Earth’s resources, 
particularly through 
organic vegan farming 
and following 
a plant-based lifestyle, 
is absolutely critical 
at a time where our planet 
has been pushed 
to the brink of existence 
by human activities 
destroying the environment.
Our sincere thanks 
Mr. Tomaž Ogrin 
for increasing 
public awareness about 
the ecological devastation 
caused by 
animal agriculture 
and the need to transition 
to sustainable energy. 
May your exemplary ideals 
for the care of our planet 
be known throughout 
Slovenia and beyond. 
For more details 
on the Institute 
of Jožef Stefan, 
please visit 
www.IJS.si
Blessed viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s episode 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May all lives be filled 
with peace and grace 
from Heaven.