To find out more
http://www.youtube.com/livevegan
Methane (CH4) has at least 20 times the heat-trapping effect of an equivalent amount of carbon dioxide (CO2).
"Researchers at the National Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science in Japan have carried out a life-cycle analysis of beef production which shows that ‘a kilogram of beef leads to the emission of greenhouse gases with a warming potential equivalent of 36.4 kilograms of CO2′ (New Scientist, 21.7.07). To help you get your head around this, that’s equivalent to the amount of CO2 emitted by the average car over a distance of 250 kilometres."
"Researchers at the University of Chicago have calculated the relative carbon intensity of a standard vegan diet in comparison to a US-style carnivorous diet, all the way through from production to processing to distribution to cooking and consumption. An average burger man (that is, not the outsize variety) emits the equivalent of 1.5 tonnes more CO2 every year than the standard vegan. By comparison, were you to trade in your conventional gas-guzzler for a state of the art Prius hybrid, your CO2 savings would amount to little more than one tonne per year."
Check out these vids:
Link between meat eating and climate change
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_1cE0x5z7c
You can’t be a meat eating environmentalist
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWWNLvgU4MI
World Food Crisis: Is Meat Consumption a Major Cause
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcGFjo62LdI
World Food Crisis: Another Major Cause
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJCK7AKjaoM
whats the best action to take on Earth Day?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-T0RDZMJgM
Earthlings (download)
http://veg-tv.info/Earthlings
If you can’t download Earthlings, you can watch it in several parts on You Tube http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=_kHmS6onJH0
"Vegan – Vegetarian Solutions for a Sustainable Environment" podcast
http://h2opodcast.com/vsse.html
Some facts
* To produce 1 lb of meat, an average of 40 lbs of vegetation is used.
* 12 lbs of wheat produce 12 loaves of bread and only 1hamburger.
* It takes 3.25 acres of land to produce food for a meat eater on a continuing basis, while it takes 1/3 of an acre for someone eating a diet of plants and dairy and 1/6 of an acre for a person eating totally plant based diet (vegan).
* A University of California Study shows that to produce 1 lb of meat it takes an average of 2,500 gallons of water, it takes 966 gallons of water to produce one gallon of cow’s milk and on the other hand plant foods such as wheat, corn, apples etc. take 20 to 50 gallons of water to produce one pound of food.
* Eating food crops first hand produces a tremendous energy savings. To produce one pound of protein derived from beef requires 20 times as much fossil fuel energy as the same one pound of protein derived from corn or wheat. Protein from beef requires 40 times more fossil fuel energy than the same amount of protein derived from soybeans.
* The waste released in the atmosphere by the U.S. Meat and Dairy Industry is 230,000 pounds per second, thus polluting earth, air and water systems.
* It is estimated that it takes 75,000 trees to print a Sunday edition of The New York Times for the readers.
These staggering numbers are a wake up-call for us to make a difference now.
Dr Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, an economist and environmental scientist who has served as the chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) since 2002 recently said
“ Worldwide, livestock-farming is responsible for no less then 18% of total greenhouse gas emissions (Source: FAO, Livestock’s long shadow, 2007).
Greenhouse gas emissions through meat production and associated land-use changes are one of the most important causes of climate change/warming. Yet
people, especially in high-income societies, continue to eat large amounts of meat. This high meat intake not only has negative effects on the climate and biodiversity; it is also harmful for our health because it increases the risk of cardio-vascular disease, obesity, diabetes and other diseases of affluence. Hence, it is very important to limit our meat consumption. Eating less meat means less greenhouse gases will be emitted.
Because our food, and especially meat consumption is such a significant cause of greenhouse gas emissions, an essential means we have in the fight against climate change may very well be our fork. Each time you eat a vegetarian meal instead of a meat-based meal, you contribute to mitigation of emissions of greenhouse gases which cause climate change. Even if you only skip meat once a week, you would still save 170 kilograms of CO2 every year. That is about the amount you emit by driving your car 1100 km.
So skipping meat now and then is a good recipe against climate change.
But of course one person can only do so much. It is also the responsibility of governments and industries to ensure that sustainable alternatives like vegetarian food are widely available and affordable. Several alternative policies and options could lead to lower consumption of meat and climate-friendly lifestyles, which a society may decide on with its own
wisdom. EVA has provided a menu of actions that could be adopted as provided below, and it is for communities and governments to decide how to consider them."
Human Benefits
* Twenty vegetarians can be fed on the amount of land needed to feed one person consuming a meat-based diet.
* If America reduced their intake of meat by 10 percent, 60 million people can be adequately fed by grain saved.
* A cow has to eat 7 lbs of grain and soy bean protein to produce 1 lb of meat protein. If the same land were to produce food for humans directly, 7 times more people could eat.
* More than half of all the water used in the United States is used in live stock production that can be used where there is water shortage.
When we become aware of these facts and change our lifestyle and go vegan we can increase the amount of grain available to feed people elsewhere, reduce pollution, save water and energy, cease contributing to the clearing of forests and the most important we can save billions of sentient beings from torture and pain.
http://www.factoryfarming.com http://www.animalsvoice.com
If one gives up all animal products eg dairy products, and adopts a plant based diet, then one is Vegan — (excluding flesh, fish, fowl, dairy products such as animal milk, butter, cheese, yogurt (curd), eggs, honey, animal gelatin and all other items of animal origin.) Going vegan is much easier than you think.
Go vegan for peace
for all living beings
and climate change
http://www.veganoutreach.org



Live Vegan,
Thank you for your efforts in promoting the awareness
Love and Light
God Bless
Vashi
http://thesoulspeaks.wordpress.com/
Where’s the beef?
Where's the beef?
Well done, Live Vegan. This cannot be said too much and is a very sensitive subject at that since many are culturally conditioned to eat meat. But even though we love and respect people who eat slaughtered animals we can't deny that it's a destructive and cruel habit. Destructive to the entire planet and to the health of people who eat this way and cruel to the animals and the generations of humans brought up to believe we have the right to eat meat and that animals don't have a value in themselves. There are endless rows of obvious facts that states what this habit does to the planet and our health but nothing seems to have effect. Meat eating has nothing to do with rational thinking but seems to be something emotionally ingrained in people since childhood. Do you have any advice as to how we should promote veganism without being seen as the enemy or as preachers?
Best Wishes
Sara