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	As
 world governments convened for the COP10 conference in Japan to solve 
the complex issue of biodiversity loss, scientists affiliated with the 
World Resources Institute (WRI) submitted an article describing the 
devastating environmental impacts of current food production methods. 
WRI Vice President for Science and Research Janet Ranganathan and former
 WRI fellow Frances Irwin highlighted the need to achieve sustainable 
food security before ecosystems are irreversibly damaged. 
 For 
instance, the climate-regulating Amazon rainforest, already one-fifth 
less its original size, has been collapsing primarily due to livestock 
grazing and growing feed crops.
 
 The researchers wrote, 
“…Delegates should turn their attention to the root cause of the 
problem: the ways in which we meet our need for food. Food supply … is a
 leading factor in the five principal pressures causing biodiversity 
loss... While producing food relies on harvesting nature's bounty, food 
production often degrades the very ecosystems it depends on.” The study 
went on to suggest key holistic strategies, including restoring degraded
 lands into forests and promoting the use of vegetable proteins to 
replace meat.
 
 Experts during the United Nations biodiversity 
conference also confirmed the importance of changing both food 
production and consumption patterns as main ways to protect ecosystems.
 
 Pavan
 Sukhdev - Study leader for The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity
 (TEEB), Special Advisor and Head of UNEP's Green Economy Initiative 
(M): Today something like 25% of all land is in some form or the 
other used for cattle and for meat food. So if you could somehow think 
of more efficient ways of making use of the same land, I think that will
 be a huge favor that we do ourselves. So we should reduce
 our meat consumption in my opinion as well.
 
 VOICE:
 Not only land but also oceans and other waterways could be protected 
from the damaging pollution of chemicals, pesticides and animal waste, 
by turning to organic growing practices and eliminating meat production.
 
 Prof. Paul Leadley – University of Paris-Sud (M): The
 pollution problem is very strongly related to agricultural practices, 
which produce much of the especially nitrogen, phosphorous, pesticides, 
and herbicides that enter the coastal waters and cause a lot of damage 
to marine ecosystems in general.
 
 One of the most important ways 
of dealing with that is changing the way that we do agriculture. Organic
 farming has important advantages, and that’s especially the getting rid
 of pesticides and herbicides and that is extremely important for the 
quality of the soils and also water quality.
 
 It also has to do 
with the amount of meat that we produce. Meat production actually 
increases the amount of plants we have to grow and it also creates a lot
 of animal wastes that are part of the problem of that nutrient 
pollution.  Those are two important things we can do.
 
 VOICE: Our 
appreciation, World Resources Institute and other international experts 
for highlighting food production methods and their effects on our 
ecosphere. Let us act now to reduce impact and save lives by adopting 
sustainable organic plant-based fare.
 As during a July 2008 
videoconference in the US, Supreme Master Ching Hai has long advocated 
the shift away from livestock production and meat consumptionto ensure a
 stable food supply and a restored planet.
 
 Supreme Master Ching Hai: We
 can help to better prepare for the future food crisis - it’s not 
future, it’s already there - but we can help to minimize it or curb it, 
by helping the developed nations to understand that vegetarian diet is 
the cure for food shortage.
 
 This is a life and death matter for 
everybody; it’s not a personal choice. And we are eating meat, eating up
 the whole planet, eating up half of the food supply and let other 
people hungry.
 
 If people change to a more benevolent lifestyle 
that is respecting all lives, then we will beget life and our lives will
 be spared. And nature will restore the balance and repair all damage.
 
 But
 people have to realize this, and they have to know it’s urgent and they
 have to cooperate. The more vegan people join the circle, the more 
chance we have to save the planet.
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