Our island features 
countless natural treasures. 
The land 
is graced by nature 
from one end to the other. 
Above all, countries 
having such clean shores 
are rare. 
You can see 
deep inside the sea, 
the water is crystal clear. 
The land is also adorned 
with unique species 
of plants. 
Mediterranean flora 
is quite typical, 
but it also features 
a vast diversity (of plants). 
Hallo, eco-aware viewers, 
and welcome to
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
On today’s program 
we travel to Cyprus 
to meet Dr. Doğan Sahir, 
an architect 
and the president 
of the non-profit 
environmental organization, 
the Cyprus 
Green Action Group 
and Dr. Salih Gücel, 
director and 
assistant professor at the
Near East University’s 
Environmental Science 
Institute to learn about 
this Mediterranean island’s 
unique ecosystem and the 
environmental challenges 
its inhabitants are facing 
due to 
harmful human activities 
and climate change.
We start with agriculture. 
Like elsewhere 
in the world, 
cultivating crops 
in a conventional manner 
causes long-term damage 
to the land upon which 
food is grown and 
even adversely affects 
areas far away from 
the farming operations.
We use excessive amounts 
of chemical fertilizers 
during our 
agricultural production. 
These chemicals 
are under strict control 
or completely banned 
in many countries, but
 we still tend to see them 
as very helpful additions 
and use them excessively, 
despite us having 
little land to cultivate. 
In a setting where 
neither adequate control 
nor certain 
monitoring procedures 
are in place 
we are detecting serious 
chemical accumulations 
in soil. 
Certain locations 
suffer severe hazards of
accumulated chemicals. 
This naturally has 
an impact on the crops, 
not to mention 
the problems set off 
when these chemicals 
are washed away by rain; 
these can contaminate 
the ground water 
and surface streams 
on their route to the sea 
and they will cause 
more problems in the seas. 
We use herbicides 
to control the weeds. 
We have already 
wiped out many 
of our endemic plants. 
Be it endemic or not, 
any plant in an ecosystem 
has a role, increases 
the biodiversity, 
but sadly we have 
damaged this as well, 
and we keep 
cornering these plants 
each and every day. 
Plants in Cyprus are
the main source of life 
in Cyprus, just as they are 
all over the world. 
As well as human beings, 
all creatures benefit 
from plants as food, 
as sources of food,
or to build shelters 
to hide in them, 
or to make their nests. 
In this respect, plants are 
the most important living 
resources of the world. 
And in Cyprus,
there are around 1,900 
different plant species. 
Including the species, 
subspecies and variants 
we have 1,900 
different plant species. 
Around 10% of them are 
indigenous to Cyprus only. 
This percentage, 
the 10% ratio 
of plant species which 
are unique to Cyprus, 
is primarily attributed to 
the geological formation 
of the island.
The loss of greenery 
across the island is 
very troubling to scientists, 
environmental advocates 
and others. 
The effects 
of climate change 
are exacerbated
without sufficient levels 
of plant life, 
thus threatening 
the future sustainability 
of life on Cyprus.
Our island doesn’t have 
sufficient vegetation. 
It should cover around
30% of the land but
currently only some 18%,
17.8% or 18.1%
to be more exact of 
forest land is registered. 
But unfortunately 
not all of these lands 
are covered with forests. 
There is a continuous loss 
from wildfires. 
As a result 
of these wildfires, 
forest areas in particular 
are destroyed. 
These negative effects 
later combine with the 
impacts of global warming 
and climate change and 
create challenging results. 
For example when forests 
are destroyed by wildfires, 
the land becomes 
devoid of vegetation,
soil becomes bare 
and becomes vulnerable.
With cloudbursts 
occurring as a result 
of climate change,
the soil is washed away 
into the sea.
So, climate change 
combined with 
the human impact yields 
an increased erosion effect.
So, our actual forest area 
is merely 7.5%, 
far less than enough. 
These days, where 
global warming and 
global climate changes 
are devastating and
destroying our planet, 
it is very sad 
that we don’t have 
the natural, green shelter 
on our island to 
control the microclimate
or alleviate the impacts. 
Bare soil surfaces and
concrete surfaces will 
increase the reflected heat 
and since there is 
not enough vegetation 
to absorb it and 
to maintain the balance 
for oxygen and humidity, 
the discharged heat will 
warm up the atmosphere, 
and this warming when 
combined with the effects 
of water vapor 
from the seas around us, 
the greenhouse effect will 
be even more devastating 
in our country 
as we are on an island.
This means 
that our island which 
is at the most vulnerable, 
hottest spot in the middle 
of the Mediterranean basin, 
which endures the 
most challenging impacts 
of the greenhouse effect, 
will endure even harsher 
climate conditions 
due to our own mistakes. 
If this scarcity of 
green plants on the land 
expands into the sea, 
calamity will be 
awaiting us, because 
it is a well-known fact 
that a great portion of 
the oxygen we breathe in, 
around 80% of it, 
is generated 
by marine plants. 
Keep in mind a great part 
of the oxygen we breathe 
is produced 
by marine plants, not the 
green plants on the land. 
If we continue 
to overlook this, and
destroy the marine life 
to get some water we will 
worsen the severity of 
the disaster awaiting us.
Dr. Sahir says recycling 
and waste management 
practices 
are not well developed 
on the island, leading to 
the contamination 
of Cyprus’s soil, air 
and freshwater resources.
Our wastes are piled up 
at certain locations, 
the so-called 
“unsanitary disposal,” 
and from time to time 
they are incinerated 
openly or
catch fire by themselves 
or are allowed to burn, 
or the wastes simply burn 
out of control. 
We have around 100 
waste dump sites, and
innumerable chemicals 
released by fires can 
have direct toxic effects 
on humans, or 
carcinogens like dioxin 
cause even worse harms 
in the long run. 
These substances, 
which have the potential 
to harm nature as a whole 
as well as humans, puts 
wildlife under pressure 
and play a role 
in the greenhouse effect 
when suspended in the air 
and also 
drop on the ground 
with the acid rain, causing 
more soil pollution.
On the other hand, 
these wastes 
can filter into the soil and 
pollute the groundwater. 
Globally approximately 
three billion people 
live in areas 
where water demand 
is higher than supply. 
Cyprus is one such place, 
causing severe hardship 
to island residents.
Today the world 
is suffering problems 
involving the reduction 
of resources, especially 
the water resources 
due to climate change. 
Cyprus is an island. 
Water is rather scarce. 
We feel the extreme effects 
of climate change.
Our country 
is unfortunately poor 
in freshwater resources. 
Since we are an island 
we have limited 
freshwater springs. 
We keep exploiting 
the groundwater. 
 
Desalination from seawater 
is now being considered. 
As a matter of fact, 
this method poses a very 
serious threat for our seas, 
because of the lack 
of laws and regulations 
or the unfulfilled need 
for improved rules. 
It's a threat with 
a potential to destroy 
the biological balance 
not only for the sea, 
a threat that can bounce 
back to hit the people 
on the land as well.
Dr. Sahir believes 
that the people of Cyprus 
must take 
constructive action now 
to assure a better future 
for their island 
as well as the planet.
 
There are several things 
that need to be done 
in our country. 
We must at least 
prevent these effects. 
Waste materials 
must be recycled. 
Since we are 
a small country 
such an effort 
may not promise
a significant income. 
However the harms 
caused by these substances 
directly on human health, 
on soil, 
in our groundwater, 
which is already scarce, 
as I've just said, and 
the secondary damage 
and pollution 
on the agricultural lands 
as they are washed away 
by surface streams 
and rainwater 
are immeasurable. 
We have to 
recycle the wastes 
in a proper way.
An effective and 
environmentally-friendly 
way to secure 
water resources 
is by harvesting rainwater.
 
However an examination 
of meteorological data 
reveals that although 
we have decreasing 
precipitation rates, 
if we could harvest 
8.5% or 10% of 
the average precipitation 
in our country 
we will have more water 
than the amount we are
readily consuming. 
If that portion of rainwater 
could be harvested and 
made available to people 
with a sanitary method, 
we wouldn’t be speaking 
of the scarce 
water resources problem 
I mentioned.
There are simple 
and effective actions 
we all can take 
to aid our planet
at this critical time, 
namely following 
an animal-free diet 
and leading 
an Earth-friendly lifestyle.
 
Earth's diversity
belongs to the Earth. 
We shouldn’t think
that Earth's diversity is
at man's disposal, 
we shouldn’t think 
that humans are
the exclusive owners 
to enjoy this. 
For that reason, 
when we are enjoying 
the biodiversity around us, 
we should keep in mind 
that other living things 
need it too, 
benefit from that too, 
and act accordingly.
 
If we can change 
some of our habits, 
we can survive this. 
We can keep the balance 
from worsening, the 
system from falling apart 
and ensure our survival 
and surely the survival 
of our children. 
In our country we have
a customary habit. 
Everyone, at the weekends, 
is accustomed 
to making kebab. 
We eat meat, we are 
mostly meat eaters. 
However a grave fact 
stands out. 
One of the key drivers 
of global warming, 
is the livestock industry, 
consumption 
of animal products; 
i.e., meat consumption. 
Methane gas emitted 
as a consequence 
of the livestock industry 
has serious impacts. 
The figures given are 
terrifying and if we can 
simply prevent this,
we should never say, 
"There is nothing 
we can do." 
If we can stop this alone, 
and be vegetarian, 
indeed we will be able to
save the Earth. 
Yes, let's be vegetarian 
and save the Earth. 
Please, play your part 
in saving our planet 
by adopting 
a vegetarian diet.
We sincerely thank you 
Doctors Doğan Sahir 
and Salih Gücel 
for informing us 
of the pressing 
environmental issues 
facing Cyprus and 
for sharing your 
concerns and solutions to 
the climate change crisis 
affecting the island 
and the rest of our planet. 
May we all quickly adopt 
the organic vegan lifestyle 
to forever ensure a safe 
and beautiful world.
 
Be Veg, 
Go Green
2 Save the Planet!
To contact today’s guests,
please visit
the following websites:
Dr. Doğan (Cyprus
Green Action Group) :
www.Facebook.com/group.php?gid=51585678216 
Dr. Salih Gücel :
www.CYEF.net/en/node/741 
Thank you 
for your kind company 
on today’s edition of
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May the magnificence 
of Heaven’s creation 
enlighten your days.