The destruction 
of the Amazon will
take us, little by little, 
into a vicious cycle. 
Destruction of the Amazon 
is the main source of 
greenhouse gases here. 
It contributes 
to global warming 
here in Brazil. 
Global warming 
transforms the forest 
into a drier environment, 
which is then 
more vulnerable 
to fire and destruction. 
So, little by little, 
this destruction becomes 
intensified and accelerates.
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Involved viewers, 
welcome to today’s 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
This week our focus is 
the fast disappearing 
Amazon rainforest, 
which is known as 
the “lungs of the Earth.” 
It is a jewel of nature 
that is absolutely vital 
to maintaining 
global climate stability.
At 7.5-million 
square kilometers in size, 
the Amazon region 
encompasses the world's 
largest rainforest 
and river basin. 
This vast area is located 
just below the equator 
and spans eight countries 
including Brazil, Peru, 
Ecuador, Colombia, 
Venezuela, Guyana, 
Surinam, and Bolivia 
as well as French Guiana, 
an overseas department 
of France. 
The largest part of 
the rainforest, 60%, 
lies in Brazil and 
covers half the country, 
followed by 13% in Peru.
The region’s name 
“Amazon” or “Amazonia” 
stems from 
the Amazon River, 
the world’s longest river 
at approximately 7,000 
kilometers in length. 
The River’s source is 
in the 5,000–meter-high 
Peruvian Andes, 
and from there 
it winds eastward, 
finally emptying into 
the Atlantic Ocean.
The moist, broadleaf 
Amazon rainforest 
plays a pivotal role 
in sustaining 
our planet’s eco-sphere, 
with its vegetation 
providing over 20% of 
the world’s oxygen and 
absorbing 1.5-billion 
metric tons of 
carbon dioxide from 
the atmosphere each year. 
These are the highest 
sources of absorption 
of carbon dioxide. 
These [are] the regulators 
of the climate’s 
temperature, rainfall, 
winds and climate patterns. 
And if the Amazon goes, 
we will not have 
our lungs, we will not
have our liver, 
we will not have our heart. 
We have 20% of 
the fresh water available 
on the surface of 
the planet in the Amazon. 
Since 1970 Brazil 
has lost approximately 
600,000 square kilometers 
of forest, an area greater 
than the size of Spain 
and Portugal combined. 
And for the last 10 years, 
an average of 2.8-million 
hectares or 0.48% 
has vanished annually. 
The main causes of this 
massive deforestation 
are clearing land 
for livestock raising and 
growing animal feed. 
Scientists warn that if 
the rainforest destruction 
here and across globe 
proceeds at the current 
pace, all rainforests will 
virtually disappear 
by the end of the century.
Global warming, 
increase in fires caused 
by men and deforestation; 
those three together 
could lead 
to a great expansion 
of tropical savannahs 
or cerrado in the Amazon.
Maybe from a third 
to 50%
of the forest area 
could become a type 
of savannah or a prairie.
Conservation of 
the Amazon is essential 
to maintaining 
Earth’s biodiversity. 
The region is home to 
one in 10 of all known 
plant and animal species 
on the planet. 
Scientists estimate the 
Amazon is endowed with 
40,000 varieties of plants, 
427 kinds of mammals, 
1,294 species of birds, 
378 types of reptiles, 427 
species of amphibians, 
and 3,000 kinds of fishes.
We have lost 
30% of the biodiversity 
on this planet 
in just 40 years. 
And in the tropics 
we’re talking about 60% 
declines in biodiversity. 
That just cannot continue. 
If it does we won’t 
have anything to eat and 
we won’t have anything 
to fuel our economy. 
There’re probably 
twice as many species 
in the tropics as there are 
in temperate regions and 
those are much more 
poorly known. 
So, in the Amazon 
probably 19 out of 20 of 
the species have not ever 
been seen by a scientist 
and have never been 
given a name.
Due to 
prolonged dry spells and 
Andes glacial retreat, 
severe droughts 
are occurring more 
frequently and intensely 
in the Amazon. 
After 
the “once in a century” 
drought in 2005, more 
widespread droughts 
devastated 
over seven-million 
square kilometers of 
the region in 2010, and 
one important Amazon 
River tributary fell to its 
lowest level in 40 years. 
Scientists from 
the Universities of Leeds 
and Sheffield in the UK 
and Brazil's Amazon 
Environmental Research 
Institute (IPAM) say that 
the 2010 drought will, 
in the short-term, 
turn the Amazon into 
a net emitter of 
carbon dioxide 
in contrast to its usual role 
as a crucial carbon sink 
for the planet. 
The researchers estimate 
that in the coming years 
the millions of trees 
dying in the Amazon 
basin will release 
five billion metric tons of 
CO2 into the atmosphere 
and three billion metric 
tons of CO2 will not 
be absorbed from the air 
because the lessened 
tree growth will reduce 
the flora in the region. 
To put into context 
these eight billion metric 
tons of carbon dioxide 
the Amazon would 
normally take in, 
consider that in 2009 
the US emitted 5.4 billion 
metric tons of CO2 from 
burning fossil fuels alone.
The majority of 
global warming scenarios 
show, obviously, 
higher temperatures 
in the Amazon, 
and some of the scenarios 
show a trend towards 
a drier climate, with 
less rain in the Amazon.
Climate changes or
changes in the patterns 
of moisture circulation 
of the Amazon 
affect the south of Brazil. 
Most of the droughts 
that we have recorded in 
the southern part of Brazil 
in the last years 
are associated 
with a lack of moisture 
coming from the Amazon. 
That is clear, too.
Black Carbon, or soot, 
a powerful greenhouse 
agent that accelerates 
the melting of 
the world’s ice sheets 
and glaciers, arises from 
the incomplete 
combustion of fossil fuels 
and the clearing 
of forests with fire. 
Its global warming 
potential over 
a 20-year period has been 
calculated at up to 4,700 
times the heat-trapping 
effect of carbon dioxide. 
I would like to point out 
the impact of 
biomass burning and the 
transport into the south. 
It is in the middle of 
the Amazon that we have 
biomass burning. 
It’s happening, in fact, 
in the Brazilian savannah, 
and in the frontier 
between the savannah 
and the Amazon forest. 
And it’s really related to 
the expansion of 
cash crops 
and cattle farms.
How can this kind of 
material be transported 
to Antarctica? 
It seems a long way. 
By now we know 
that cyclonic activity is 
able to transport materials 
in a short time, 
in a week or so,
from the main areas of 
biomass burning, 
to the south and then 
mainly to the northernmost 
part of Antarctica, 
that is 
the Antarctic Peninsula.
West Antarctica is 
the fastest warming place 
on Earth. 
The melting there 
is happening 
at an alarming rate and 
they’re discovering much 
to the surprise 
of researchers 
that the Black Carbon 
is also there 
in large quantities. 
A 2009 study by the 
University of Toronto, 
Canada and the Canadian 
Institute for Advanced 
Research projects 
a six to seven meter rise 
in sea levels should the 
West Antarctic Ice Sheet 
collapse. 
Such a devastating event 
would mean 
the submergence of 
many coastal cities 
in the Americas.
As of 2005, Brazil 
had approximately 
207-million cattle, 
a population size 
second only to India’s. 
Greenpeace Brazil 
estimated in 2009 that 
the livestock industry 
is responsible for 
about 80% of 
Amazon deforestation.
The livestock sector is 
by far the single largest 
anthropogenic user 
of land. 
Livestock production 
accounts for 70% 
of all agricultural land 
and 30% of the world’s 
surface land area. 
And 70% of 
previously forested land 
in the Amazon is occupied 
by cattle pastures, 
and crops for animal feed 
cover a large part 
of the remainder. 
I was following 
the Brazilian economy 
almost 15 to 20 years ago 
and you would recall 
that there was a period 
in the 1980s when Brazil 
had a huge foreign debt, 
something like 
US$120-billion dollars 
at that point in time. 
And one of the means 
by which they decided 
to liquidate that 
and neutralize it was by 
converting a large area 
of forest land 
into pasture land. 
That’s when the 
whole problem started, 
but it has continued. 
The landmark 2006 
report “Livestock’s 
Long Shadow” by 
the Food and Agriculture 
Organization of 
the United Nations states 
that livestock raising is 
the world’s number-one 
source of human-induced 
methane, being 
responsible for 37%. 
Brazil 
is a very small producer 
of greenhouse gases. 
So, Brazil accounts 
for just one percent 
of world emissions 
if you exclude the Amazon. 
If we include the Amazon, 
Brazil drops down 
in the list and becomes 
the fourth world producer. 
The emissions caused 
by Amazon deforestation 
are three times larger 
than all the remaining 
Brazilian emissions. 
This situation is actually 
the largest environmental 
problem faced by Brazil 
and it must be addressed, 
not only because of 
environmental problems 
but also because there 
are 20-million Brazilians 
living in the Amazon 
and they will not be able 
to stay in that region 
if things don’t change. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
has often discussed 
the enormous importance 
of the world’s rainforests 
and how we can 
effectively protect our 
planet’s eco-systems 
as in a October 2009 
videoconference 
in Germany.
Saving the world’s 
tropical forests, 
the lungs of the Earth, 
is one of the very 
important priorities. 
Because when the 
tropical rainforests are 
destroyed, there are many 
frightening side effects. 
It’s not just 
the permanent changes to 
the world’s temperature, 
rainfall, and 
weather patterns which 
the forests regulate. 
It’s not just about 
the millions of people 
who might lose 
their livelihoods that 
depend on the forests. 
The rainforests 
themselves normally 
are our protectors, but as 
the climate gets warmer, 
instead of absorbing CO2 
to protect our planet’s 
climate, they will be 
emitting back CO2 as well. 
They will be not helping us, 
the rainforest, 
if the climate gets warmer. 
But instead, 
they will be worsening 
the global warming problem. 
Stop the livestock 
industry -- that would be 
the most effective way 
to halt global warming 
and restore our planet. 
It will save 
our precious forests.
How do we shut down 
the livestock industry? 
The organic vegan diet 
is the clear answer. 
If the world embraces 
a lifestyle free of 
animal products, 
the industry’s 
destructive activities 
will immediately end and 
trees and animal lives 
will be saved. 
Such a noble change 
by humanity will 
produce a beneficial, 
cooling effect by 
significantly reducing our 
production of methane 
and other dangerous 
greenhouse gases, thus 
preserving our planet.
Benevolent viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we always be filled 
with the Divine bliss 
of Heaven.