Using
 satellite data from the United Nations researchers at Stanford 
University in California, USA have found that more than 80% of 
agricultural land expansion in the tropics between 1980 and 2000 did not
 come from use of existing land  but instead resulted from deforestation
 of primarily rainforests. 
What has also been documented is that
 the forests are being cleared to create pastureland for livestock as 
well as to grow crops such as soya and palm oil products used for animal
 feed. 
Stanford researcher and study author Dr. Holly Gibbs 
stated, “This has huge implications for global warming, if we continue 
to expand our farmland into tropical forests at that rate.” An earlier 
study, “Climate Benefits of Changing Diet,” from the Netherlands 
Environmental Assessment Agency, found that a global shift to a vegan 
diet would result in significant reforestation, along with an 80% 
reduction in climate change mitigation costs. 
Thank you, Dr. 
Gibbs, Stanford colleagues and Netherlands Environmental Assessment 
Agency for highlighting the link between tropical deforestation and 
livestock raising. 
May we all realize the importance of a 
dietary shift away from animal products to save the tropical rainforests
 and reverse global warming.  As on many other occasions, Supreme Master
 Ching Hai reminded of the detrimental tolls of livestock raising and 
the need to halt it for the sake of our planet during an October 2009 
videoconference in Germany.
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 Saving the world’s tropical forests, the lungs of the Earth, is one of 
the very important priorities. 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.
Now, we need to look at the main reason why there is 
deforestation. There is a whole industry behind it in most of the cases,
 namely the livestock industry. For example, the number one reason for 
deforestation of the Amazon, which is the greatest lung of our planet, 
is to raise cattle.
 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, which takes decades to grow, and create
 more natural forests that we need to reduce global warming.
We must stop the livestock industry. I hope the leaders will do this.
http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0902-tropical_agriculture.htmlhttp://news.stanford.edu/news/2010/september/farmland-cutting-forests-090210.htmlhttp://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/global-warming/deforestation-overview.htmlhttp://www.pbl.nl/en/publications/2009/Climate-benefits-of-changing-diet.htmlhttp://www.nature.org/initiatives/climatechange/strategies/art13747.html