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Eat Veggies, Help World

 

MICHAEL F. JACOBSON

 

April 3 2007

 

So you're using the air conditioner a bit less and you replaced your

old light bulbs with high-efficiency ones. Perhaps you've traded in

the Hummer for a Prius or, better yet, are giving public

transportation a spin. Those steps, big and small, will all help slow

down global warming and otherwise be helpful to the environment.

 

Stick with `em.

 

But if you want to help even more, consider that you have three more

opportunities every single day to do something for your planet:

breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

 

Americans eat more than a billion pounds of food each day. To churn

out the grains, meat and poultry, and fruits and vegetables that feed

the country, our agricultural system consumes enormous quantities of

fuel, fertilizers, water and pesticides and enormous tracts of

erodible land.

 

But much of those resources aren't feeding us directly - they're

producing the feed for the animals we eat, a terribly inefficient

process that wastes nonrenewable resources. Many of the 100 million

acres of land and 17 trillion gallons of irrigation water used to

grow animal feed could be put to more productive uses - or not used.

 

The energy used just to produce fertilizer for feed crops could

instead be used to fuel 1 million homes. Reducing the use of

fertilizer to grow corn in the Midwest would bring aquatic life back

to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, where there is now a New

Jersey-size dead zone.

 

Besides squandering resources going into animals, consider what we

get out of them. For starters, there's methane, a greenhouse gas 23

times more conducive to global warming than carbon dioxide. The

methane produced by belching cattle and giant lagoons of hog manure

has the same impact on global warming as the carbon dioxide produced

by 33 million automobiles.

 

The standard American diet, relatively high in meat and dairy, might

as well be called the Global Warming Diet. Making even small changes

can add up, as you can see on calculators available at

www.EatingGreen. org. Replacing one hamburger, one egg and a 1-ounce

serving of cheese each day for a year with a mix of vegetables,

fruit, beans and whole grains would spare the need for 1.8 acres of

cropland, 40 pounds of fertilizer, and 3 ounces of pesticides. It

also would mean dumping 11,400 fewer pounds of animal manure into the

environment.

 

Another benefit of eating fewer animal products is that fewer animals

will need to be raised. Most livestock today suffer miserably when

they are crammed together in small crowded cages, huge crowded sheds

or filthy crowded feedlots.

 

If altruism isn't reason enough to eat a " greener " diet, consider the

selfish reasons to switch from burgers and bacon to cantaloupe and

carrots. Vegetarians and others who eat more-plant-based diets are

healthier than the rest of us. They have much lower rates of obesity,

heart attacks, strokes and diabetes. Eliminating all the fats from

beef, pork, poultry and dairy foods from Americans' diets would save

about 65,000 lives a year. And adding lots of plant foods would make

arteries more flexible and reduce rates of cancer.

 

The government's Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends we eat

more plant-based diets, but the it hasn't adopted supportive

policies. The government gives corn farmers several billion dollars a

year to provide cheap feed for livestock and cheap high-fructose corn

syrup for soda makers.

 

Why not direct those billions to putting more fresh fruits and

vegetables on the lunch trays of America's school kids? Also, the

U.S. Department of Agriculture encourages the consumption of beef,

pork, dairy and eggs. Why not do that for whole wheat bread and

broccoli instead?

 

A greener diet won't stop all the glaciers from melting, but it

protects hearts, cuts air and water pollution, and reduces animal

suffering. Quite a bargain from eating delicious meals.

 

Michael F. Jacobson is executive director of the Center for Science

in the Public Interest in Washington. This was distributed by

McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

 

Copyright 2007, Hartford Courant

 

http://www.courant. com/news/ opinion/op_ ed/hc-jacobson04

03.artapr03, 0,2357221. story?coll= hc-headlines- oped

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Sure makes sense to me! My hubby and I do everything we possibly

can for the environment.

 

Lor

 

 

 

, " brbrunner " <brbrunner

wrote:

>

> Eat Veggies, Help World

>

> MICHAEL F. JACOBSON

>

> April 3 2007

>

> So you're using the air conditioner a bit less and you replaced your

> old light bulbs with high-efficiency ones. Perhaps you've traded in

> the Hummer for a Prius or, better yet, are giving public

> transportation a spin. Those steps, big and small, will all help slow

> down global warming and otherwise be helpful to the environment.

>

> Stick with `em.

>

> But if you want to help even more, consider that you have three more

> opportunities every single day to do something for your planet:

> breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

>

> Americans eat more than a billion pounds of food each day. To churn

> out the grains, meat and poultry, and fruits and vegetables that feed

> the country, our agricultural system consumes enormous quantities of

> fuel, fertilizers, water and pesticides and enormous tracts of

> erodible land.

>

> But much of those resources aren't feeding us directly - they're

> producing the feed for the animals we eat, a terribly inefficient

> process that wastes nonrenewable resources. Many of the 100 million

> acres of land and 17 trillion gallons of irrigation water used to

> grow animal feed could be put to more productive uses - or not used.

>

> The energy used just to produce fertilizer for feed crops could

> instead be used to fuel 1 million homes. Reducing the use of

> fertilizer to grow corn in the Midwest would bring aquatic life back

> to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, where there is now a New

> Jersey-size dead zone.

>

> Besides squandering resources going into animals, consider what we

> get out of them. For starters, there's methane, a greenhouse gas 23

> times more conducive to global warming than carbon dioxide. The

> methane produced by belching cattle and giant lagoons of hog manure

> has the same impact on global warming as the carbon dioxide produced

> by 33 million automobiles.

>

> The standard American diet, relatively high in meat and dairy, might

> as well be called the Global Warming Diet. Making even small changes

> can add up, as you can see on calculators available at

> www.EatingGreen. org. Replacing one hamburger, one egg and a 1-ounce

> serving of cheese each day for a year with a mix of vegetables,

> fruit, beans and whole grains would spare the need for 1.8 acres of

> cropland, 40 pounds of fertilizer, and 3 ounces of pesticides. It

> also would mean dumping 11,400 fewer pounds of animal manure into the

> environment.

>

> Another benefit of eating fewer animal products is that fewer animals

> will need to be raised. Most livestock today suffer miserably when

> they are crammed together in small crowded cages, huge crowded sheds

> or filthy crowded feedlots.

>

> If altruism isn't reason enough to eat a " greener " diet, consider the

> selfish reasons to switch from burgers and bacon to cantaloupe and

> carrots. Vegetarians and others who eat more-plant-based diets are

> healthier than the rest of us. They have much lower rates of obesity,

> heart attacks, strokes and diabetes. Eliminating all the fats from

> beef, pork, poultry and dairy foods from Americans' diets would save

> about 65,000 lives a year. And adding lots of plant foods would make

> arteries more flexible and reduce rates of cancer.

>

> The government's Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends we eat

> more plant-based diets, but the it hasn't adopted supportive

> policies. The government gives corn farmers several billion dollars a

> year to provide cheap feed for livestock and cheap high-fructose corn

> syrup for soda makers.

>

> Why not direct those billions to putting more fresh fruits and

> vegetables on the lunch trays of America's school kids? Also, the

> U.S. Department of Agriculture encourages the consumption of beef,

> pork, dairy and eggs. Why not do that for whole wheat bread and

> broccoli instead?

>

> A greener diet won't stop all the glaciers from melting, but it

> protects hearts, cuts air and water pollution, and reduces animal

> suffering. Quite a bargain from eating delicious meals.

>

> Michael F. Jacobson is executive director of the Center for Science

> in the Public Interest in Washington. This was distributed by

> McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

>

> Copyright 2007, Hartford Courant

>

> http://www.courant. com/news/ opinion/op_ ed/hc-jacobson04

> 03.artapr03, 0,2357221. story?coll= hc-headlines- oped

>

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Guest guest

I had no idea and I don't think most people do either.

Bev

 

 

 

, " brbrunner " <brbrunner

wrote:

>

> Eat Veggies, Help World

>

> MICHAEL F. JACOBSON

>

> April 3 2007

>

> So you're using the air conditioner a bit less and you replaced

your

> old light bulbs with high-efficiency ones. Perhaps you've traded

in

> the Hummer for a Prius or, better yet, are giving public

> transportation a spin. Those steps, big and small, will all help

slow

> down global warming and otherwise be helpful to the environment.

>

> Stick with `em.

>

> But if you want to help even more, consider that you have three

more

> opportunities every single day to do something for your planet:

> breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

>

> Americans eat more than a billion pounds of food each day. To

churn

> out the grains, meat and poultry, and fruits and vegetables that

feed

> the country, our agricultural system consumes enormous quantities

of

> fuel, fertilizers, water and pesticides and enormous tracts of

> erodible land.

>

> But much of those resources aren't feeding us directly - they're

> producing the feed for the animals we eat, a terribly inefficient

> process that wastes nonrenewable resources. Many of the 100

million

> acres of land and 17 trillion gallons of irrigation water used to

> grow animal feed could be put to more productive uses - or not

used.

>

> The energy used just to produce fertilizer for feed crops could

> instead be used to fuel 1 million homes. Reducing the use of

> fertilizer to grow corn in the Midwest would bring aquatic life

back

> to the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico, where there is now a New

> Jersey-size dead zone.

>

> Besides squandering resources going into animals, consider what we

> get out of them. For starters, there's methane, a greenhouse gas

23

> times more conducive to global warming than carbon dioxide. The

> methane produced by belching cattle and giant lagoons of hog

manure

> has the same impact on global warming as the carbon dioxide

produced

> by 33 million automobiles.

>

> The standard American diet, relatively high in meat and dairy,

might

> as well be called the Global Warming Diet. Making even small

changes

> can add up, as you can see on calculators available at

> www.EatingGreen. org. Replacing one hamburger, one egg and a 1-

ounce

> serving of cheese each day for a year with a mix of vegetables,

> fruit, beans and whole grains would spare the need for 1.8 acres

of

> cropland, 40 pounds of fertilizer, and 3 ounces of pesticides. It

> also would mean dumping 11,400 fewer pounds of animal manure into

the

> environment.

>

> Another benefit of eating fewer animal products is that fewer

animals

> will need to be raised. Most livestock today suffer miserably when

> they are crammed together in small crowded cages, huge crowded

sheds

> or filthy crowded feedlots.

>

> If altruism isn't reason enough to eat a " greener " diet, consider

the

> selfish reasons to switch from burgers and bacon to cantaloupe and

> carrots. Vegetarians and others who eat more-plant-based diets are

> healthier than the rest of us. They have much lower rates of

obesity,

> heart attacks, strokes and diabetes. Eliminating all the fats from

> beef, pork, poultry and dairy foods from Americans' diets would

save

> about 65,000 lives a year. And adding lots of plant foods would

make

> arteries more flexible and reduce rates of cancer.

>

> The government's Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends we

eat

> more plant-based diets, but the it hasn't adopted supportive

> policies. The government gives corn farmers several billion

dollars a

> year to provide cheap feed for livestock and cheap high-fructose

corn

> syrup for soda makers.

>

> Why not direct those billions to putting more fresh fruits and

> vegetables on the lunch trays of America's school kids? Also, the

> U.S. Department of Agriculture encourages the consumption of beef,

> pork, dairy and eggs. Why not do that for whole wheat bread and

> broccoli instead?

>

> A greener diet won't stop all the glaciers from melting, but it

> protects hearts, cuts air and water pollution, and reduces animal

> suffering. Quite a bargain from eating delicious meals.

>

> Michael F. Jacobson is executive director of the Center for

Science

> in the Public Interest in Washington. This was distributed by

> McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

>

> Copyright 2007, Hartford Courant

>

> http://www.courant. com/news/ opinion/op_ ed/hc-jacobson04

> 03.artapr03, 0,2357221. story?coll= hc-headlines- oped

>

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