Tuesday, October 16, 2007

A LITTLE LATE-BUT MUCH BETTER

Yesterday was Blogger Action Day for the Environment.

In support of Blogger Action Day, albeit belatedly, the Author is reposting his manifesto from September 22, 2007, "Your Big Mac or Your SUV? Which Will it Be?"

YOUR BIG MAC OR YOUR BIG SUV? WHICH WILL IT BE?
P.S. YOU MIGHT NOT WANT TO READ THIS BEFORE BREAKFAST. (YOU HAVE AT LEAST BEEN WARNED.)


As many readers know, the Author is a vegetarian. He made this change in 2001. So for more than six and one-half years, he has reduced his environmental foot print and greenhouse gas production by substantial amounts. Just be refusing to eat the decaying flesh of dead animals. The Author won’t be sweetening up the rhetoric for this post.

MORE THAN THE COW DIES FOR YOUR STEAK. OR YOUR FAT BURGER.

A United Nations Report from November 2006, “Livestock’s Long Shadow: Environmental Issues and Options” describes in stark and staggering terms the huge environmental costs of animal corpse production and processing. Check out these nuggets:

• The livestock sector is a major player, responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions measured in CO2 equivalent. This is a higher share than transport. (AUTHOR’S NOTE: All of the planes, trains automobiles and sundry transport devices produce 13% of greenhouse gases.) The livestock sector accounts for 9 percent of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. The largest share of this derives from land-use changes – especially deforestation – caused by expansion of pastures and arable land for feedcrops.
• Livestock are responsible for much larger shares of some gases with far higher potential to warm the atmosphere. The sector emits 37 percent of anthropogenic methane (with 23 times the global warming potential (GWP) of CO2) most of that from enteric (AUTHOR’S NOTE: Intestinal) fermentation by ruminants. It emits 65 percent of anthropogenic nitrous oxide (with 296 times the GWP of CO2), the great majority from manure. Livestock are also responsible for almost two-thirds (64 percent) of anthropogenic ammonia emissions, which contribute significantly to acid rain and acidification of ecosystems.

DOES YOUR WATER TAST LIKE MANURE? LIKELY IT IS SUFFUSED WITH IT?

According to the EPS, as reported by Goveg.com and “Nuggets and Hummers and Fish Sticks, Oh My! Why Vegetarianism Is the Best Way to Help the Environment”, by Bruce Friedrich,:

• The EPA reports that chicken, hog, and cattle excrement have polluted 35,000 miles of rivers in 22 states and contaminated groundwater in 17 states.35 Besides the environmental problems caused by farmed animal waste, the dangerous fecal bacteria from farm sewage, including E. coli, can also cause serious illness in humans.
• A 2006 report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration found that the Gulf of Mexico’s “dead zone”—an area in which virtually all the sea animals and plants have died—is now half the size of Maryland.36 In 2006, a separate study by Princeton University found that a shift away from meat production—as well as Americans’ adoption of vegetarian diets—would dramatically reduce the amount of nitrogen in the Gulf to levels that would make the dead zone “small or non-existent.
• According to a report prepared by U.S. Senate researchers, animals raised for food in the U.S. produce 86,000 pounds of excrement per second — that’s 130 times more than the amount of excrement that the entire human population of the U.S. produces! Farmed animals’ excrement is more concentrated than human excrement, and is often contaminated with herbicides, pesticides, toxic chemicals, hormones, antibiotics, and other harmful substances. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the runoff from factory farms pollutes our rivers and lakes more than all other industrial sources combined.
• According to the National Audubon Society, raising animals for food requires about as much water as all other water uses combined. Environmental author John Robbins estimates that it takes about 300 gallons of water to feed a vegan for a day, , four times as much water to feed an ovo-lacto vegetarian, and about 14 times as much water to feed a meat-eater.

DITCH THE DEAD MAMMALS AND KEEP YOUR HIGH PERFORMANCE MOTORCYCLE.

The Author recognizes that he rides a recreational vehicle, a motorcycle. The Ducati 999 is almost never used for general transportation. He recognizes that this recreational choice involves the combustion of hydrocarbons. But other aspects of his life, such as his vegetarianism and his decision not to be a child-bearer, greatly reduces his carbon footprint. So he is already far ahead of most everyone else.

Want a bigger boat or a bigger truck? Ditch the dung producers and go veg!

WHAT YOU EAT IS SLOWLY KILLING YOU AND MOST EVERTHING ELSE. WE LIVE DIFFERENTLY IN THE DESERT OF THE REAL. THAT WILL NOT MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE, BUT IT IS ALL OF THE DIFFERENCE WE CAN MAKE!

STONER & CAPIROSSI STORM THE ISLAND TO WIN CONSTRUCTORS' & TEAMS' WORLD TITLES

Ducati MotoGP Team riders Casey Stoner and Loris Capirossi stormed Phillip Island today, scoring a stunning one-two result that secures the constructors' World Championship for the legendary Italian factory and also the team's World Championship for the Borgo-Panigale-based squad.

Riding his first race as riders' World Champion, Stoner led from start to finish while Japanese GP winner Capirossi fought through from fifth place on the first lap. It was an immaculate and dominant performance from Aussie Stoner who was cheered all the way by an ecstatic 50,000 crowd. At one point he led the pack by almost eight seconds, eventually crossing the line 6.763 seconds ahead of his team-mate. Stoner's ninth victory of the year is also the team's fifth win from the past six races and the Ducati's tenth win of this season. Stoner, who topped all but one of the five pre-race track sessions here, celebrates his 22nd birthday on Tuesday.

Ducati is the first non-Japanese manufacturer to win the premier-class constructors' title since 1973, when MV Agusta were champions.

CASEY STONER, winner, World Champion on 322 points

"Being up on the podium was just unbelievable, I've never felt anything like it. I've been working very hard for a lot of years trying to win here. This whole season has been magical for us, we came here with a lot less pressure after winning the title in Japan, so I could really enjoy this race. It's definitely my best victory so far. I have to thank the Australian fans, it's good to see so many of them here and I hope they've had a lot of fun, I really appreciate it. I made one of my best starts, I had the first corner to myself so I could concentrate on getting the tyres warmed up and ready to go. Nicky [Hayden, who DNFed] was really pushing in the beginning, he was on my rear wheel for a while but I managed to get away. I was really hoping, more than ever, that Loris would get on the podium here, so it's been another great weekend for the team and for Ducati."

LORIS CAPIROSSI, 2nd place, 7th in World Championship on 150 points

"My start wasn't really good, so in the early laps I had to fight a lot with Marco [Melandri] and in my opinion he was little bit too aggressive. I had to push really hard to overtake him and then I said 'please take it easy'. After that I tried to keep my pace and I finished second, so I'm really, really happy and a big thanks to my team who worked so hard all weekend. This is another great moment, especially after my win at Motegi. I am trying to end my five years with Ducati in the best way possible. Ducati has won everything this year - the riders', constructors' and teams' championships, which proves that everything's working 100 per cent at the factory."

GABRIELE DEL TORCHIO, CEO Ducati Motor Holding

"Winning the constructors' and teams' titles confirms and strengthens the value of the goal conquered three weeks ago by Casey. We have a great team of men and women who, with courage and warmth, have made a dream come true."

More details and images are available at http://www.ducati.com/racing/00_home_racing/gp/index.jhtml