Informed viewers,
welcome to this week’s
episode of Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
the conclusion of
a two-part series where
we feature the thoughts
of famed American
environmental advocate
Lester Brown on global
ecological destruction
and the serious
consequences to
communities worldwide.
Mr. Brown holds
a masters degree in
agricultural economics
from the University of
Maryland, USA, and
in public administration
from Harvard University,
USA.
For over 40 years
he has dedicated himself
to work in environmental
conservation and
economic sustainability.
Mr. Brown has authored
and co-authored
more than 50 books,
including the best-selling
“Plan B” series
and his 2011 release,
“World on the Edge:
How to Prevent
Environmental and
Economic Collapse.”
His books have been
translated into
approximately
40 languages.
Regarded as the father
of modern grassroots
environmentalism,
the Washington Post says
he is “one of the most
influential thinkers
in the world” and
the Telegraph of Calcutta
calls him “the guru of the
environmental movement.”
He has also received
numerous honorary
degrees and prizes
such as the
MacArthur Fellowship,
the United Nations
Environment Prize, and
the World Wide Fund
for Nature Gold Medal.
Lester Brown
has formulated
what he calls “Plan B”
to save our planet
and civilization.
It is called “Plan B”
because
“Plan A” is simply
as Mr. Brown puts it
“business as usual”
or no change as to
how we treat the Earth.
Let’s now hear about
some of the components
of Plan B.
Business as usual is
no longer a viable option
over the longer term..
The question is
what we do about this.
That’s why
we’ve developed Plan B.
One, reduce
carbon emissions 80%,
not by 2050,
which is what politicians
like to talk about,
but by 2020.
We didn’t ask the question,
“What would be
politically feasible or
politically acceptable ?”
We asked instead
the question,
starting with the science,
how fast do we have to
cut carbon emissions
if we want to save
the Greenland ice sheet?
And I used
the Greenland ice sheet
because
it’s sort of a metaphor
for the Earth itself.
Scientists have told us
that if the Greenland
ice sheet melts entirely,
the sea level rises
seven meters.
But even a one-meter rise
in sea level would put
half of the rice land
in Bangladesh under water.
It would put a large piece
of the Mekong Delta
under water
and Âu Lạc (Vietnam)
is the world’s second
largest rice exporter.
There are 19 other
rice-growing river deltas
in Asia
where rice production
would shrink with
just a one-meter rise
in sea level.
Think of it;
ice melting on an island
in the far north Atlantic
can shrink the rice harvest
in Asia where half
the world’s people live.
We’re living
in a very complex world.
We have to
eradicate poverty.
And then
restore the economy’s
natural support systems.
The world now needs
to do a great job
of reforestation.
Each year the world’s
forests are shrinking.
We have less tree cover
than the year before.
And we can’t
continue that indefinitely.
The world’s soils
are eroding, including
the soils on our crop land.
We see today
the formation
of huge dust storms
in Northern and Western
China
and Western Mongolia
early each spring.
So we’re losing topsoil
big time.
Switching to
sustainable energy sources
can help reduce
toxic greenhouse gases
and other forms
of air pollution,
thus helping to
mitigate climate change.
In “World on the Edge,”
Lester Brown notes that
the North African nation
of Algeria maintains that
just by producing
solar power in its deserts,
the country could generate
sufficient electricity to
meet the energy needs of
the entire world economy.
In 2009,
several European firms
established
the Desertec Foundation
to build
solar thermal-generation
facilities in North Africa
and the Middle East
to provide power
to the countries
producing the electricity
as well as to supply Europe
with energy.
Let me talk for a minute
about new sources
of energy.
As of today there is
about 13,000 megawatts
of geothermal energy
in the world being used
for electricity.
Solar-generated electricity,
the capacity is about
37,000 megawatts;
wind, 240,000 megawatts.
For the last decade
wind has been growing
at nearly 30% per year
worldwide.
And it's beginning
to make a huge difference.
In some places
wind is an important
source of energy,
it's the major source
of electricity now.
For example, in the three
northernmost states
in Germany, from 40
to 60% of the electricity
is coming from wind farms.
Mr. Brown says that the
costs of global warming
and environmental
degradation are typically
not incorporated into
any given product’s
market price and thus
carbon taxes are needed
to achieve
an environmentally
honest market.
The key to restructuring
the world energy economy,
shifting from fossil fuels,
oil and coal
and natural gas
to clean sources of energy,
wind and solar
and geothermal, is to
restructure the tax system.
The market
does many things well.
But one thing
it does not do well is to
incorporate indirect cost
in market prices.
Market prices include
only the direct cost.
For example,
in the United States,
when we buy a gallon
of gasoline, it costs
nearly US$4 a gallon.
That covers the cost
of pumping the oil,
getting the oil to a refinery,
making the gasoline,
and getting the gasoline
to local service stations.
It does not cover the cost
of climate change.
It does not cover the cost
of treating
respiratory illnesses from
breathing the polluted air.
When you include
these indirect costs
in the price of gasoline,
it goes from US$4 a gallon
to US$12 a gallon.
We have deluded ourselves
in letting the market
set the price into thinking
that burning oil
or burning coal is cheap.
It is not. It is very costly.
And we’ve only paid
part of the bill so far.
The big part of the bill
will be coming due
in the years ahead.
It’s already coming due
now in many situations.
In “World on the Edge,”
Mr. Brown calculates
the budget needed
for global implementation
of “Plan B” to be
about US$200 billion.
Compared to the size of
the US military budget,
this is indeed
a relatively small figure.
When we look at
the US budget,
we see US$700 billion
for military purposes.
That US$200 billion
we need
to eradicate poverty and
restore the economy's
natural support systems,
reforestation, etc.,
that's less than a third of
the US military budget.
It's only an eighth of
the global military budget.
We can't say we don't
have the resources to do
what needs to be done.
We do. We know
what needs to be done.
And we have
the resources to do it.
What it's going to take
is a lot of NGOs,
(non-governmental
organizations)
like the ones I represent
and work with
in the (United) States
pushing for change.
And what we’re
talking about now
is not just saving some
environmental system.
We're talking about the
future of civilization itself,
because no civilization
has ever survived
the ongoing destruction
of its natural support
systems, nor will ours.
Compared to a vegan diet,
a meat diet uses up to
17-times as much land,
14 -times as much water
and 10-times
as much energy.
And if all the grains
currently used to feed
livestock globally
were instead reserved
for humans,
the entire hungry and
malnourished population
of Earth could be fed.
There are
two good reasons for us
to eat less meat
and more plant foods.
One is the health reason.
In the United States,
we have obesity
and much of that’s from
consuming too much fat
and fat-rich
livestock products.
We have problems with
heart disease from that.
So, moving down
the food chain and
consuming less fat-rich
livestock products
would make us healthier.
It also would
make the planet healthier,
because it reduces
the demand on
the world’s grain supplies.
The amount of grain
required to produce
a kilogram of meat,
whether it’s poultry
or pork or beef, is three,
four, five, six pounds.
So it takes a lot of grain
to produce meat, and
milk and eggs as well.
It’s a fairly simple matter
of just consuming
less meat
and more plant products.
And it’s not
a major sacrifice.
We clearly need to
move down the food chain
and consume less,
particularly fat-rich
livestock products.
Livestock production is
the world’s single largest
emitter of methane,
which is 72-times
more powerful than
carbon dioxide in terms
of heating the atmosphere
over a 20-year period.
Also, methane dissipates
out of the atmosphere
in about 12 years,
whereas
carbon dioxide stays
for thousands of years.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
often speaks about
the importance
of the organic vegan diet
in eliminating shorter-lived
greenhouse gases
such as methane
from the air
as in this June 2011
videoconference hosted
by the Supreme Master
Ching Hai
International Association
in Mexico City, Mexico
titled
“From Crisis To Peace:
The Whole Universe
is Blessing Us.”
The founder of
the Earth Policy Institute,
Lester Brown, who is
a respected US
environmental leader,
stated that climate change
is happening so fast
right now that we need to
reduce emissions,
greenhouse gas emissions,
80% by 2020,
to protect global
food supplies even –
just food supplies even.
Not 80% by 2050,
as suggested before,
which is the date
discussed by many
politicians, but 80% now –
I mean, soon,
by 2020, maximum –
because if we lose
food security,
our civilization
could collapse.
Moral standards, even,
could collapse;
people’s health
could deteriorate;
happiness could also
collapse;
nations could collapse –
every other thing
might also collapse.
Lester Brown and
others point out
that the great Mayan
civilization in Mexico
may have fallen
when it lost control
over its food supply.
Climatologists say that
we are facing the same
danger now, today.
If it happened before,
it could happen again.
So how do we reduce
greenhouse gas emissions
80% by 2020?
How do we do that?
How do we keep
the global temperature
at safe levels?
There is a solution.
A few months ago,
the United Nations
proposed that the best way
to bring about cooling,
rather than focusing on
carbon dioxide,
would be to reduce
the shorter-lived
global warming agents.
These include methane,
black carbon, and
ground-level ozone.
And how?
Again, the fastest,
cheapest way to do this
is to stop raising animals
for human consumption.
We thank you,
Lester Brown
and your colleagues at
the Earth Policy Institute,
for analyzing
the root causes of
civilization’s current crisis
and developing “Plan B,”
as an action strategy
for humankind to follow
to protect our planet.
May you successfully
continue your
invaluable research
on preserving our world
and safeguarding
communities worldwide
in the years ahead.
For more information
on Lester Brown,
please visit
www.Earth-Policy.org
Hard copies
and free-to-download
PDF versions
of Lester Brown’s books
including
“World on the Edge:
How to Prevent
Environmental
and Economic Collapse”
are available at
www.Earth-Policy.org/books
Pleasant viewers,
thank you for watching
this week’s episode of
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home.
May the everlasting light
and love of Heaven
touch all beings.