“How to Reduce 
Meat
 Consumption’s Climate Impacts” was the title of a recent seminar and 
panel discussion at the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. The Head of the
 Nordic Office for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization,
 Christina Engfeldt, spoke of the organization’s concern about the 
impact of the livestock industry on climate change, world hunger and 
human health. Distinguished scientists specializing in environment and 
agriculture also presented their findings, including a possible 
meat
 tax. Also present were members of the Swedish Parliament, including 
European Parliament member Jens Holm. This meeting came just days after 
the multi-language release of Mr. Holm’s co-authored report, “The 
Livestock Industry and the Climate,” along with the launch of the new 
information resource website, www.
meatclimate.org.
Supreme Master Television had a chance to interview some of the speakers.
Dr. Stefan Wirsenius, Physics and resource theory scientist, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden (M):
 You can design a consumption tax scheme on food that is based on the 
amount of greenhouse gases each category of food emits, in a way that 
you actually increase the tax on those commodities like 
meat, that emits more, especially beef and lamb 
meat, and decrease the value-added tax that we have in many European countries for, like beans. That could be a very good option.
Christina Engfeldt – United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Head of the Nordic Office (F):
 All these decisions will have to be taken at a political and 
institutional level. We will have to put a price on land areas for 
growing food, for fodder, for water, for waste management.
VOICE: We asked Ms. Engfeldt what would be the picture if no action was taken on the unsustainable livestock industry.
Christina Engfeldt – United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Head of the Nordic Office (F):
 Then we will double the negative effects on the environment and we are 
already at an untenable, unsustainable level when it comes to waste 
management, when it comes to greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, to 
destruction of natural resources, land, water, ecosystems, biological 
diversity. And then again, we will not find a way to live healthy lives a
 few years from now, and our children and grandchildren will inherit a 
very polluted world.
If more people would choose to live a healthier life, and have a more balanced diet, eat less 
meat, or preferably no 
meat,
 we could ensure that we would decrease environmental degradation, and 
we could decrease world hunger, and more people would be able to look 
forward to a better life in the future.
To see the report co-issued by European Parliament Member Jens Holm, please visit ec.europa.eu, 
www.jensholm.se/english, or 
www.meatclimate.org.
VOICE:
 We wholeheartedly agree with the call of Ms. Engfeldt, Dr. Wirsenius, 
Swedish Parliament members, and others for urgent measures toward 
sustainability, including reducing the impact of 
meat
 consumption on the environment. We pray that the world’s governments 
will step forward in wise actions to pass on a planet that supports the 
lives of our children and all beings on Earth.