"Celebrate Earth Day - Veggie Style"
by Tracy
Rohland With more than 6 billion people living on planet earth
using her water, her oil, her plants and her air, she
is very overwhelmed. She is desperately hoping that
we, the people who traverse her soil on a daily basis,
will be more courteous and careful.
April 22 is Earth Day, a perfect opportunity to salute
Mother Earth and remember how vital it is that we take
care of her.
In 1970, Senator Gaylord Nelson founded the first
annual Earth Day, kicking off the grassroots environmental
movement in America and around the world. Since the
founding of Earth Day, environmental issues have been
brought to the forefront of politics and the media.
People around the world have become more aware of the
human impact on the environment and more conscientious
about their individual roles in maintaining the health
of the environment. Vehicle emission restrictions have
become stricter, recycling has become a household activity,
sewage treatment has drastically improved, and hundreds
of thousands of people have eliminated meat products
from their diet. The transition to a vegetarian diet
is a practical way that every person can work to make
a brighter future for the planet.
In recent years, many studies have been done comparing
the environmental impact of a meat-based diet to a
vegetarian diet. All of these studies conclude that
raising animals for slaughter is a deplorable waste
of resources. According to Professor David Pimentel
of Cornell University's Ecology Department, it takes
500 liters of water to produce 1kg of potatoes, 900
liters per kg of wheat, 3,500 liters per kg of digestible
chicken flesh and an incredible 100,000 liters for
1kg of beef. The pollution of water sources is also
a huge problem with meat companies. Furthermore, the
amount of grain that is grown to feed livestock could
solve the famine problem of the world.
In her book, The State of the
Environment Atlas,
Joni Seager states, 'In cycling our grain through livestock,
we waste 90 percent of its protein and 96 percent of
its calories. An acre of cereal can produce five times
more protein than an acre devoted to meat production;
and legumes (beans, lentils, peas) can produce ten
times as much. Thus the greater the human consumption
of animal products, the fewer people can be fed.
Raising
animals for slaughter also affects the air we breathe.
An estimated 100 million tons of methane (12 percent – 15
percent of all methane emissions) are released into
the atmosphere each year by cattle, contributing
significantly to global warming. All over the world,
ranchers will cut down expanses of forest for cattle
ranching, let the animals graze for a few years,
then leave the once fruitful land, barren and worthless.
When hamburgers are two for a dollar, it is easy
to ignore the actual cost to our planet and future
generations, but it is critical that we consider
this before it is too late.
A vegetarian diet is the healthiest
and most efficient means of producing food. Since 1977,
Down To Earth has been committed to promoting vegetarianism,
healthy living, respect for the environment, and sustainable
organic farming. This Earth Day, make a choice that will
better your own health, the health of Mother Earth, and
the health of generations to come – go veggie.
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