Saving
the Earth, One Bite at a Time
[from COK's Vegetarian
Starter Guide]
Increasingly, the environment has become a
dumping ground for toxins, chemicals, and widespread pollution. The
water we drink is so contaminated, many are afraid to drink anything
except bottled water. The air we breathe is tainted with ammonia, methane,
and carbon monoxide. Raising animals for food is one of the leading
causes of pollution and resource depletion today. Becoming vegetarian
helps protect the natural environment.
Polluting Our Water and Air
The more than 10 billion land animals raised for food
each year in the United States excrete massive quantities of urine and
feces. According to a Minority Staff of a U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture,
Nutrition & Forestry report, the amount of farmed animal manure
produced in the United States equals five tons of waste for every single
human being.(1)
According to the Union of Concerned Scientists, the laws regulating animal
waste are nowhere near as strict as those regulating human waste,(2) and
the Sierra Club notes that the existing laws are often not enforced.(3)
This is particularly alarming because the waste generated on factory farms
can be hundreds of times more concentrated than untreated domestic sewage.(4)
The two most common techniques for handling waste
on factory farms are manure lagoons and sprayfields. Manure lagoons can
flood, burst, or leak, contaminating rivers, streams, and groundwater.(5)
Nutrient runoff from sprayfields is another way waste enters our water
sources.(5) The results can be devastating.
The Senate report mentioned above states: Spills
of liquid animal waste directly into water have an immediate environmental
impact, choking out fish and other aquatic life
.The resulting
hypoxia (low oxygen) from chronic nutrient enrichment can result in fish
kills, odor and overall degradation of water quality.(1)
Manure lagoons and sprayfields also pollute the
air, by emitting ammonia, methane, and hydrogen sulfide.
Wasting Resources
It takes more land, water, and energy to produce
meat than to grow vegetarian foods. Its several times more efficient
to eat grains directly than to funnel them through farmed animals. According
to the Audubon Society, roughly 70 percent of the grain grown and 50 percent
of the water consumed in the United States are used by the meat industry.(7)
A Minority Staff of Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry
report states the beef in just one Big Mac represents enough wheat to
make five loaves of bread.(1)
Does Eating Fish Also Harm the Planet?
While the factory farming of land animals contributes
to ecological degradation, aquaculture and commercial fishing in the
oceans also take a grave environmental toll.
Much of the biodiversity of the oceans has been depleted
by overfishing. In order to kill large numbers of animals
at one time, commercial fishers use sonar, spotting planes, and fishing
nets large enough to swallow 12 jumbo 747 jets. While these methods
clearly decrease the variety and numbers of ocean animals, aquaculture
(factory farmed fish) is not much better for the planet.
According to the journal Science, a two-acre salmon
farm produces as much waste as a town of 10,000 people.(8) Aquaculture
farms dump waste, pesticides, and other chemicals directly into ecologically
fragile coastal waters. Local ecosystems are destroyed, devastating
both animal and plant life.
Choosing Sustainability
Becoming vegetarian not only saves the lives of countless
animals each year, but also helps restore our natural environment. By
avoiding animal products in our diets, we choose sustainability over
ecological destruction, and take positive steps toward protecting our
planet for ourselves and our loved ones.
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References
- Animal Waste Pollution in America: An Emerging National Problem, Minority
Staff of Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry,
104th Congress, Dec. 1997.
- Michael Brower and Warren Leon. The Consumers Guide to Effective
Environmental Choices: Practical Advice from the Union of Concerned
Scientists. Three Rivers Press/Crown Publishers, 1999.
- Clean Water & Factory Farms, Corporate Hogs at the Public Trough,
Perdue Farms, Maryland, Sierra Club, 1999.
- Howard Lyman with Glen Merzer. Mad Cowboy: Plain Truth from the Cattle
Rancher Who Wont Eat Meat. Scribner, 1998.
- EQIP Restrictions For Large CAFOs: A Key to Saving Small Farms and Environmental
Quality, Defenders of Wildlife, 2001.
- The Rap Sheet on Animal Factories, Sierra Club, 2002.
- Resolutions for a New Millennium, Audubon News, Jan. 1, 2000.
- Marcia Barinaga. Fish, Money, and Science in Puget Sound, Science, Feb.
9, 1990.