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There are many reasons to be a vegetarian. Some are physical – decreasing your meat intake can reduce your risk of heart disease, diabetes, many kinds of cancer, obesity, and a host of other potentially life threatening illnesses and conditions.
Some are moral or political – factory farming, an increasingly common practice of breeding animals in small, overcrowded, dirty, and inhumane conditions gives many people pause if not requiring a total rethink of your philosophy on consumption.
Some are environmental – studies have shown that cutting animal flesh out of your diet results in a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by about 1.5 metric tons a year. Not only are cattle a huge source of methane (a particularly egregious greenhouse gas) but major fuel emissions are necessary to power factories and processing plants as well as trucks to ship the processed meat all over the world (a caveat – the fruits, vegetables, and grains that comprise the staples of a vegetarian diet are also often shipped to far away places). No matter the food, buying local is increasingly important.
The truth is that nearly 18% of greenhouse gas emissions contributing to global warming come from activities associated with livestock production. In fact, studies done by the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization found that livestock generate more greenhouse gases than all forms of transportation combined. And not only are livestock responsible for direct greenhouse gas emissions, but in order to create new pastures to meet increasing demand for meat, forests are being cleared with alarming frequency. Nowhere is this more apparent than in South America, where forest clearing in the Amazon nearly doubled in the latter months of 2007 and continues to be on the incline.
One of the areas in which we are the most careless with our consumption is food. Many people know that driving hybrid vehicles or recycling will help decrease their carbon footprints, but what fewer people know is that decreasing meat consumption, or going vegetarian, will give our planet a dramatically better shot at a cleaner future. It is one of the easiest and most intuitive changes you can make. And a lot cheaper than a new Prius.
It’s pretty clear that there are a host of reasons to become a vegetarian. If you are eating meat, make sure you know from where it is coming.
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January Events (NYC)
NYC MulchFest 2012 - TreeCycle
Saturday and Sunday January 7 - 8, 2012
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
NYC Parks - Find a Location Near You!
Gia Speaking at NY International Gift Fair!
Seminar: How Green is Green? Determining & Weighing Degrees of Sustainability
Monday, January 30, 2012
3:30 - 4:30 pm
Javits Center, 1A02-03
Register here
February Events (NYC)
Thursday, February 2, 2012
5:30 - 9:00 pm
PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP 300 Madison Avenue, PwC Auditorium SW Corner of 42nd Street
Want to list an event? Please send to info@ecoplum.com.
Reviews
By Rena Mosteirin on Apr 18, 2009
Comments: Kudos Michelle! I agree with you and would like to add that the movie Babe is what did it for me. Lots of animal lovers worked on that film, and if anyone out there is having a hard time with cutting meat from their diet, and you agree with the ecological arguments but you just need a little nudge in the right direction, rent Babe!
By Orly J on Apr 17, 2009
Comments: also check out Sharon Ganon's new book about the yoga and vegetarianism: www.jivamuktiyoga.com/boutique/index.html
By Ellie Lotan on Apr 17, 2009
Comments: So important to be reminded of all the reasons to go veg- when you lay them all out, you cant help but wonder how anyone still eats meat.
By Gia Machlin on Apr 1, 2009
Comments: See Price of Meat blog for more info on this: priceofmeat.com/2009/04/01/meat-and-global-warming-is-there-really-a