A
 two- year study by accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers, commissioned
 by the UN Environment Program, (UNEP) titled “The Economics of 
Ecosystems and Biodiversity” (TEEB) puts a price tag on the economic 
impact of environmentally-damaging business practices that cripple or 
prevent flora and fauna from providing ecosystem services. 
The 
report brings attention to the largely ignored multibillion dollar 
deficits resulting from activities that cause water contamination, 
deforestation, fish depletion and land loss due to soil erosion and 
drought. 
The estimated annual cost to the world economy in 2008 for 
such practices was between US$2 trillion and US$4.5 trillion, equating 
to as much as 7.5% of global income.  
These findings are 
particularly critical today as human-caused global warming continues to 
trigger the rapid deterioration of global biodiversity. Dr. Heather 
MacKay of the international wetlands conservation agreement, the Ramsar 
Convention, spoke to Supreme Master Television of the gravity of the 
situation.
Dr. Heather MacKay, Chair of Ramsar Convention’s 
Scientific and Review Panel (STRP) (F): It’s really gotten to the point 
where it’s very serious. We are seeing now many very significant tipping
 points being reached in ecosystems. So we’re very worried and need to 
try and reverse this.
VOICE: The United Nations Food and 
Agriculture Organization (FAO) has named animal raising for meat and 
dairy production among the primary factors of biodiversity loss. 
As 
an earlier FAO report stated, “Indeed, the livestock sector may well be 
the leading player in the reduction of biodiversity, since it is the 
major driver of deforestation, as well as one of the leading drivers of 
land degradation, pollution, climate change, overfishing, sedimentation 
of coastal areas and facilitation of invasions by alien species.”
Dr. Heather MacKay (F): It’s
 true that intensive production of livestock can take up significant 
resources. We will all have to look at our diets, what we eat, what we 
consume, where we get our water. 
All of those things will become 
important. We need to work on an international level on governance, 
national level with policies and laws, but we will also need to actively
 restore large ecosystems, to restore biodiversity, to protect it.
VOICE:
 Thank you, Dr. MacKay, PriceWaterhouseCoopers and UNEP, for 
highlighting yet another aspect of the immense benefit provided by the 
plants and animals in our environment. 
May we all quickly adopt a 
biodiversity-conserving plant-based diet for the sake of the global 
economy as well as all life on Earth. Supreme Master Ching Hai has long 
emphasized the vital need for conservation and protection of all fellow 
beings, as during a July 2008 videoconference in Formosa (Taiwan).
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 So we lost many of these precious species, we lost many of us, because 
they are us. And we still did not wake up yet. We should have more 
rules, more guidelines, to protect natural habitats. 
Above all, 
enlightenment is really what’s needed to govern. That’s number one. And 
 vegan diet with right motive, number two, will offer more compassion 
and insight, also will help preserve precious natural habitats for the 
wild and protect the resources for humans.
http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2266348/un-warns-biodiversity-loss http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10587022http://gbo3.cbd.int/media/2721/gbo_en_web.pdf