In its new report entitled “The Environmental Food Crisis,” the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) states that current 
meat
 production is actually worsening the food crisis and climate change 
effects. This is due to the unsustainable demands of livestock raising 
on energy, cereals and water. United Nations Under-Secretary General and
 Executive Director of UNEP Achim Steiner explained some of the areas 
raised in the new assessment.
Achim Steiner – UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of UNEP (M): What
 is the role of livestock, in terms of climate change, but also what is 
the consumption of livestock and the increasing use of 
meat
 for instance in our diets? Our role is to inform people and to also 
give them the opportunity to perhaps change their lifestyles by having 
better information.
VOICE: The UNEP report states, “
Meat
 production is energy inefficient and environmentally harmful at 
industrial scales and with intense use of feed crops such as maize and 
soybeans… the loss of calories by feeding the cereals to animals instead
 of using the cereals directly as human food represents the annual 
calorie need for more than 3.5 billion people.” With the United Nations 
Food and Agriculture Organization estimating that nearly one billion 
people suffer from hunger today, wide adoption of the animal-free 
lifestyle would likely eliminate food shortages.
Dr. Arab 
Hoballah, Chief of the Sustainable Consumption and Production Branch at 
UNEP, is optimistic that once well informed, people may create a culture
 of consuming more sustainably.
Dr.
 Arab Hoballah – Chief of the Sustainable Consumption and Production 
Branch, Division of Technology, Industry and Economics at UNEP (M): Of course 
vegetarian is known to be extremely healthy; extremely healthy for the planet. The 
meat,
 the relation to the water, the relation to vegetation, the need that we
 destroy forests to have all the cattle grown up, is a problem. But it 
has to be analyzed very carefully, and slowly educate people about the 
benefits. Make them become more responsible, and we believe that we can 
change habits and have the right multiplier effect very soon.
VOICE:
 We thank Chief Dr. Hoballah, Executive Director Steiner and the United 
Nations Environment Program for their efforts to raise awareness through
 this up-to-date information on the environmental impact of livestock 
raising. Let us all act responsibly in making 
vegan food choices that fulfill the needs of all people on the planet.
During
 the February 2009 climate change videoconference with dignitaries and 
the public in Mexico, Supreme Master Ching Hai made it clear that 
replacing animal raising with organic 
vegan harvests is the primary solution for both the food crisis and global warming.
Videoconference with Supreme Master Ching Hai
SOS: Save the Planet Xalapa, Mexico March 6, 2009
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 With the world food shortage continuing to worsen, more people are 
going hungry every day, so if we just stop the animal raising practices 
and turn instead to growing organic vegan 
food for humans, everyone in the world will benefit, and we can save our
 planet. If we don’t feed all the corn and all the cereals and 
vegetables to the animals, all the food that we produce right now could 
feed two billion people already. So, there’s not even worry about a food
 shortage and then we have a better future, a better conscience. And our
 planet will have a bright future if everyone turned to organic vegetarian diet and organic vegan farming.