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Swedish Parliament discusses meat tax to mitigate climate change
 “How to Reduce Meat Consumption’s Climate Impacts” was the title of a recent seminar and panel discussion at the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. The Head of the Nordic Office for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Christina Engfeldt, spoke of the organization’s concern about the impact of the livestock industry on climate change, world hunger and human health. Distinguished scientists specializing in environment and agriculture also presented their findings, including a possible meat tax. Also present were members of the Swedish Parliament, including European Parliament member Jens Holm. This meeting came just days after the multi-language release of Mr. Holm’s co-authored report, “The Livestock Industry and the Climate,” along with the launch of the new information resource website, www.meatclimate.org.

Supreme Master Television had a chance to interview some of the speakers.

Dr. Stefan Wirsenius, Physics and resource theory scientist, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden (M): You can design a consumption tax scheme on food that is based on the amount of greenhouse gases each category of food emits, in a way that you actually increase the tax on those commodities like meat, that emits more, especially beef and lamb meat, and decrease the value-added tax that we have in many European countries for, like beans. That could be a very good option.


Christina Engfeldt – United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Head of the Nordic Office (F): All these decisions will have to be taken at a political and institutional level. We will have to put a price on land areas for growing food, for fodder, for water, for waste management.

VOICE: We asked Ms. Engfeldt what would be the picture if no action was taken on the unsustainable livestock industry.

Christina Engfeldt – United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Head of the Nordic Office (F): Then we will double the negative effects on the environment and we are already at an untenable, unsustainable level when it comes to waste management, when it comes to greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, to destruction of natural resources, land, water, ecosystems, biological diversity. And then again, we will not find a way to live healthy lives a few years from now, and our children and grandchildren will inherit a very polluted world.

If more people would choose to live a healthier life, and have a more balanced diet, eat less meat, or preferably no meat, we could ensure that we would decrease environmental degradation, and we could decrease world hunger, and more people would be able to look forward to a better life in the future.

To see the report co-issued by European Parliament Member Jens Holm, please visit ec.europa.eu, www.jensholm.se/english, or www.meatclimate.org.

VOICE: We wholeheartedly agree with the call of Ms. Engfeldt, Dr. Wirsenius, Swedish Parliament members, and others for urgent measures toward sustainability, including reducing the impact of meat consumption on the environment. We pray that the world’s governments will step forward in wise actions to pass on a planet that supports the lives of our children and all beings on Earth.

CAPE VERDE: Growing food without soil
 Cape Verde farmers boost food production through hydroponics. With little rainfall and less than 10 percent cultivable land on the Republic of Cape Verde, a set of islands off the coast of western Africa, some farmers have sought to boost food production and nutrition through hydroponic farming techniques. By employing a nutrient solution and gravel instead of soil, hydroponic farmer Sergio Roque Monteiro said that he uses less than a fifth of the water and only a portion of the land that would be needed for traditional farming. With plans to expand his business, Mr. Monteiro stated that hydroponics can help fill both the production and nutrient gaps by planting a variety of products that provide plentiful and nourishing sustenance.

What a green way to go, Mr. Monteiro! We wish evermore bountiful harvests for the people of Cape Verde as more farmers make the switch to the efficient yet bountiful practice of hydroponics.

During the SOS International Conference on Urgent Problems of Climate Change held in January 2009 in Mongolia, Supreme Master Ching Hai gave some tips regarding such alternative ways of farming.


Videoconference with Supreme Master Ching Hai Global Warming – SOS International Conference on Urgent Problems of Climate Change  Mongolia - January 27, 2009

Supreme Master Ching Hai: If more and more people choose organic farming as well, we help each other to the best possible of our ability and most gentle way for all beings and the Earth. From then, we can share food since we have so much food. We can do that through such a method as hydroponics. You can even plant and harvest indoors, so we can do it also by ourselves.

There’s no need even farmers, if we have a little garden, we can plant it ourselves. Or if we have a balcony, we can even plant it in water. We must start now so that you can have your own vegetables. It’s very easy. If you just have a little pot even, on the balcony, the size you want. And you just sow some seed on it. A few days later, you already have some vegetables, salad, for example.



 Air-powered car on show
Geneva Auto Show displays air-powered car. At the recent Geneva Auto Show in Switzerland, French firm MDI displayed the AirPod, a three-wheeled car that runs on compressed air. Traveling up to 220 kilometers on one 175-litre tank of this zero-emission source, the compressed air supplies can be recharged in 8 hours with electricity outlets or in just 2 minutes at specially-designed air stations. This €6,000 vehicle will soon be pilot tested by Air France and KLM airlines, and then in the French city of Nice in December.

What an advancement in road transportation! Kudos, MDI, for your eco-friendly development. We can’t wait to be able to travel in this air-powered vehicle toward a cleaner, brighter future.

Bay Area Cities Sign Climate Change Pact

California, USA cities sign climate change agreement. San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose have formed the Bay Area Climate Change Collaborative. The goal of the group is to coordinate individual city policies on reducing carbon emissions, conserving water use, improving green building standards and increasing sustainable energy production. Plans also include training and employing 20,000 green workers as well as adaptation measures for global warming related sea level rise.

Cities of San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose, we laud your efforts to unify in addressing this urgent matter of our time. May cities, states, and nations worldwide join in similarly green leadership to safeguard our planet for a sustainable future.