"You know, the world's climate scientists tell us that the highest safe level of emissions would be around 350 parts per million of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases in the atmosphere." "We're already at 400." "They tell us that the sort of safest we could hope to do without having perilous implications as far as drought, famine, human conflict, major species extinction would be about a 2-degree Celsius increase in temperature." "We're rapidly approaching that, and with all the built-in carbon dioxide that's already in the atmosphere, we're easily going to exceed that." "So on our watch, we are facing the next major extinction of species on the earth that we haven't seen since the time of the dinosaurs disappearing." "When whole countries go underwater because of sea-level rise when whole countries find that there's so much drought that they can't feed their population and as a result, they need to desperately migrate to another country or invade another country..." "I mean, we're gonna have climate wars in the future." "And what about...?" "What about livestock and animal agriculture?" "Well, what about it?" "I mean" "My name's Kip." "This is me." "I had a cliché U.S.American childhood." "My mom was a teacher." "My dad was in the military." "And I have one sister." "I played all sports growing up but I always loved the outdoors and camping." "Life was simple, not a care in the world." "And then this guy showed up." "Like so many of us I saw his film An Inconvenient Truth about the impacts of global warming." "It scared the Emojis out of me." "In Al Gore's film, he describes how Earth is in peril." "Climate change stands to affect all life on this planet." "From monster storms, raging wildfires record droughts, ice caps melting acidification of the oceans, to entire countries going underwater that could all be caused by humans' demands on the Earth." "With scientists warning unless we take drastic measures to correct our environmental footprint, our time on this planet maybe limited to only 50 more years, I wanted to do everything I could to help." "I made up my mind right then and there to change how I lived and to do whatever I possibly could to find away for all of us to live together in balance with the planet, sustainably, forever." "I started to do all the things Al told us to do." "I became an OCE, obsessive-compulsive environmentalist." "I separated the trash and recycling, I composted changed the light bulbs, took short showers brushed with the water off, turned off lights when leaving and rode my bike instead of driving everywhere." "But as the years went by, it seemed as if things were getting worse." "I had to wonder, with all the continuing ecological crisis facing the planet even if every single one of us adopted these conservation habits was this really gonna be enough to save the world?" "It just seemed that there was something more to the story." "I thought I was doing everything I could to help the planet." "But then with one's friend's post everything changed." "The post sent me to a report online published by the United Nations stating that cows produce more greenhouse gases than the entire transportation sector." "This means that raising cattle produces more greenhouse gases than all cars, trucks, trains, boats, planes combined." "Thirteen percent compared to 18 percent for livestock." "This is because cows produce a substantial amount of methane from their digestive process." "Methane gas from livestock is 25to 100 times more destructive than carbon dioxide from vehicles." "Here I'd been riding my bike everywhere to help reduce emissions." "But it turns out there's more to climate change than just fossil fuels." "I did more research." "The U.N. along with other agencies reported not only did livestock play a major role in global warming it is also the leading cause of resource consumption and environmental degradation destroying the planet today." "How is it possible I wasn't aware of this?" "I thought this information would be in the environmental community." "I went to the nation's largest environmental organizations' websites... 350.org, Greenpeace, Sierra Club Climate Reality, Rainforest Action Network, Amazon Watch and was shocked to see they had virtually nothing on animal agriculture." "What was going on?" "Why would they not have this information on there?" "It seemed the main focus for many groups was natural gas and oil production with fracking being the latest hot issue, due to water usage and contamination." "...with fracking being the latest hot issue, due to water usage and contamination." "Hydraulic fracturing for natural gas uses an incredible amount of water." "A staggering 100 billion gallons of water is used every year in the United States." "But when I compared this with animal agriculture raising livestock just in the U.S. consumes 34 trillion gallons of water." "And it turns out the methane emissions from both industries are nearly equal." "Living in California, a state plagued by drought and water shortages water use is a major concern for many of us." "The average Californian uses about 1500 gallons per person per day." "About half of that is related to the consumption of meat and dairy products." "So meat and dairy products are incredibly water-intensive in part because the animals are using very water-intensive grains." "That's what they eat, and so all of the water embedded in the grain and that the animal eats essentially is considered part of the virtual water footprint of that product." "I found out that one quarter-pound hamburger requires over 660 gallons of water to produce." "Here I've been taking these short showers to save water and to find out just eating one hamburger is the equivalent of showering two entire months." "So much attention is given to lowering home water use." "Yet domestic water use is 5 percent of what is consumed in the U.S versus 55 percent for animal agriculture." "That's because it takes upwards of 2500 gallons of water to produce 1 pound of beef." "I went on the government's Department of Water Resources Save Our Water campaign." "It outlines behavior changes to conserve water." "Like using low-flow shower heads, efficient toilets water-saving appliances, and fix leaky faucets and sprinkler heads." "But nothing about animal agriculture." "When I added up all the government's recommendations I was saving 47 gallons a day." "But still that's not even close to the 660 gallons of water for just one burger." "I wanted to see if I could talk with the government about this." "Just calling to see if we could schedule an interview." "Yeah, that would be good." "What does your schedule look like this afternoon or tomorrow afternoon?" " Tomorrow afternoon." " Tomorrow afternoon could be good." "For the urban environment, a lot of things can be done." "Indoors, you know using low-flow shower heads, low-flow faucets efficient toilets efficient water-using appliances." "All of those are really good areas that can help quite a lot." "But the biggest water savings is from outdoors." "We have to be mindful of the way we use water." "We have to use it efficiently, protect its quality and be good stewards of the environment that depend on water." "And checking the sprinklers." "A lot of times you get a lot of leaks and broken sprinklers and things like that that waste water." "Those are the areas that there is a lot of room for conservation." "It kept on coming up a lot, was animal agriculture." "Can you comment on that at all, about how much that plays a role in water consumption and pollution?" "That's-I mean, that's not my area." "There's one study that found that 1 pound of beef 2500 gallons of water." " Yeah." " Yeah." "Eggs are 477 gallons of water." "And cheese, almost 900 gallons." "I mean, why isn't it on Save Our Water?" "It's kind of like if you went to someone's house and my neighbour has a faucet, you know, dripping." "And then you see this giant hose turned full-blast until 660 gallons of water are shooting out into the street flooding the entire street." "I think I would say, "Hey, you know, turn that off, please."" "Seems like it's a huge thing that we could be doing by far more than anything else." "Just, like, if that is really the case." "I think that the water footprint of animal husbandry is greater than other activities." "There's no ifs, ands or buts about it." "That would be really powerful." "Rather than waiting till we're in a drought, what do you think about starting now?" "And say to whoever's in charge of Save Our Water:" ""Hey, let's start encouraging people to eat less meat now because these studies are coming out"?" " I don't think that'll happen." " Why?" " I don't think that'll happen." " Why?" "Because of the way government is set up here." "That's interesting, though." "Why, though?" "One is water management and the other is behavior change." "Behavior of taking showers and not watering your lawn and doing all that, that's behavior." "Yeah." "Clearly the government did not want to talk about this issue." "Their inability to answer along with the organization's silence on the topic of animal agriculture made it seem something more was going on." "I did more investigating on the impacts of livestock..." "I did more investigating on the impacts of livestock and found out the situation was actually worse than I'd thought." "In 2009, two advisors from the World Bank released an analysis on human-induced greenhouse gases finding that animal agriculture was responsible not for 18 percent as the U.N. stated, but was actually 51 percent of all greenhouse gases." "Fifty-one percent." "Yet all we hear about is burning fossil fuels." "This devastating figure is due to clear-cutting rainforests for grazing respiration, and all the waste animals produced." "This makes animal agriculture the number one contributor to human-caused climate change." "But not only that, I found out raising animals for food consumes a third of all the planet's freshwater occupies up to 45 percent of the Earth's land is responsible for up to 91 percent of Amazon destruction is a leading cause of species extinction ocean "dead zones" and habitat destruction." "Yet the world's largest environmental groups that are supposed to be saving our world didn't mention this anywhere." "I had to speak with them to find out why they weren't addressing this issue." "I sent off dozens of e-mails, made call after call spent hours on hold." "Days became weeks, weeks became months and for some reason, no one wanted to talk to me about this." "So bizarre." "I supported these organizations for so long and now was met with silence." "I was, however, able to connect with a handful of environmental authors and advocates that were willing to address this issue." "I took my old, trusty van "Super Blue" out of retirement and hit the road." "So my calculations are that without using any gas or oil or fuel ever again from this day forward that we would still exceed our maximum carbon-equivalent greenhouse gas emissions, the 565 gigatons, by the year 2030 without the electricity sector or energy sector even factored in the equation, all simply by raising and eating livestock." "You reduce methane emissions, the level in the atmosphere goes down fairly quickly, within decades, as opposed to CO2 if you reduce the emissions to the atmosphere you don't see a signal in the atmosphere for 100 years or so." "The single largest contributor to every environmental ill known to humankind..." "Cutting down the forest to graze animals and to grow soybeans, genetically-engineered soybeans to feed to the cows and pigs and chickens and factory-farmed fish." "Ninety-one percent of the loss of rainforest in the Amazon area thus far to date 91 percent that's been destroyed is due to raising livestock." "The lead cause of environmental destruction is animal agriculture." "I just couldn't understand why the world's largest environmental organizations weren't addressing this when their entire mission is to protect the environment." "That's the thing, too, is they say:" ""Use less coal, ride your bike." What about "eat less meat"?" "I think they focus-grouped it and it's a political loser." "Yeah, because they're membership organizations, you know, a lot of them." "They're looking to maximize the number of people making contributions." "And if they get identified as being anti-meat or challenging people on their everyday habits something that's so dear to people, that it will hurt with their fundraising." "They do not want to address the primary driving cause of environmental devastation, which is animal agriculture because they're businesses." "And they want to make sure that they have a reliable source of funding." "I was invited to a meeting with Al Gore some years ago made these methane arguments, and he pushed back." "That's just his argument." ""It's hard enough to get people to think about CO2." "Don't confuse them."" "The problem with a lot of organizations that are focused and have a laser focus don't go off message because they don't wanna piss off another whole group of people that will make their lives difficult." "Major environmental organizations don't tell you to do much besides live your life the way you've been living it but change a light bulb from time to time drive less, use less plastic, recycle more." "It's better for their fundraising and better for their profile to create a victim-and-perpetrator sort of plotline." "It's like when we talk about the fact that we have a dysfunctional family and the father's an alcoholic, that's the one thing no one talks about." "Everybody goes around that, and yet it's the one thing that's causing the devastation in the relationships in the family because no one wants to talk about it." "How could these organizations not know?" "The issue is right in front of them." "It's unmistakable at this point." "And just like these organizations, they're falling over themselves to show the general public that climate change is human-caused." "And in doing so, they completely fail to see what's right in front of them that animal agriculture, raising and killing animals for food is really what's killing the planet." "That was it." "No more e-mails, no more phone calls." "I had enough." "I realized if I wanted answers, I'd have to go to these organizations' headquarters in person." " Hi, how's it going?" " Good." "We're doing a full-length feature documentary and it's on sustainability and how animal agriculture plays a role." "And we're seeing if we could talk to David Barre." " Barre?" "Okay." " Yeah." " Do you have an appointment with him?" " We've been trying for almost two months." "We haven't even had one receptive e-mail or anything." " Seeing if we could just set something up." " Sure, let me..." "So let me just..." "They sent out their PR person instead." "She refused to be filmed and told us to turn off the camera but promised someone from their Rainforest, Ocean and Climate Change Departments would all speak with us, finally." "Next stop was to give Sierra Club a visit." "They were a bit more receptive to me showing up at their doorstep." "Hey, how's it going?" "With the climate change, what's the leading cause of that?" "Well, it's basically burning too many fossil fuels." "You know, so coal, natural gas, oil." "Tarsands, oil shale." "All these new exotic fuels that are kind of hybrids between them." "But that's basically what is loading up the atmosphere so we have this greenhouse effect where the heat is getting trapped and the temperatures are soaring at a rate that has never existed in the history of the Earth." "And what about...?" "What about livestock and animal agriculture?" "Well, what about it?" "I mean but I'm afraid we're not going to be able to help this time." "Thanks again, and we wish you the best of luck."" "Greenpeace's response reminded me of the statistic..." "Greenpeace's response reminded me of the statistic that 116,000 pounds of farm animal excrement is produced every second in the United States alone." "That is enough waste per year to cover every square foot of San Francisco New York City, Tokyo, Paris New Delhi, Berlin, Hong Kong, London Rio De Janeiro, Delaware, Bali, Costa Rica, and Denmark combined." "Livestock operations on land has caused, or created more than 500 nitrogen-flooded dead zones around the world in our oceans." "Comprise more than 95,000 square miles of areas completely devoid of life." "So any meaningful discussion about the state of our oceans has to always begin by frank discussions about land-based animal agriculture which is not what our conservation groups" "Oceana being the largest one in the world right now, the most influential." "As well as others." "That's not what is at the apex of their discussions." "I went on my favorite ocean-protection organization's website Surf rider Foundation, to see what they're doing about this." "Mostly what I found were campaigns about plastic bags and trash but nothing about animal agriculture." "What is the number one coastal water quality-issue polluter?" "Like-?" "Yeah, I mean, a lot of it" "It's actually- We call it, like, the "toxic cocktail."" "Because it really is this sort of diffuse source." "So it's, you know, heavy metal from tires and brakes and cars, heavy metals." "It is these herbicides and pesticides." "It's really just kind of picking up everything we leave on the ground and collecting it together and pushing it out into the ocean." "So it's hard to actually target, like, one thing." "When we're doing our research on this particular one, and run off just kind of increasingly as we're interviewing more and more people it keeps coming up, animal agriculture, as being..." "And we read animal agriculture as being the number one water polluter considerably by more than any other..." "Yeah, that's interesting.I guess it depends on the regions that you focus on." "Like the urban areas, like where we are here in Southern California we don't see that, because there's not a lot of agricultural farms but if you look in the mid-Atlantic Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, that region I know there's a lot of poultry farms and a lot of hog farms and it's a huge waste issue." "I was surprised that not only did they not focus on farm run off but they also didn't mention any campaigns about how our oceans are in near-collapse." "The U.N. reported that three-quarters of the world's fisheries are overexploited, fully exploited, or significantly depleted due to overfishing." "Oceans are under siege like never before." "Marine environments are in trouble." "If we don't wake up and do something about it we'll see fishless oceans bytheyear2048." "That's the prediction from scientists." "When people look at fishing, some times they only look at the animals who are actually consumed by humans, so we don't necessarily look at all the animals who are caught in the drift nets all the other animals who are killed in the industry." "And when you look at..." "Even the shrimping industry has done a lot to devastate the planet as well in terms of breaking down natural barriers that we have to protect them, the islands." "We're at over28 billion animals were pulled out of the ocean last year." "They're never given a chance to recover." "They don't multiply quickly." "They don't come back." "We're not giving them an opportunity." "The oceans are in complete collapse." "The large fish species are nearing extinction." "The way fishing is done today, to feed the demand for90 million tons offish, is primarily through massive fish nets." "For every single pound offish caught, there is up to 5 pounds of untargeted species trapped." "Such as dolphins, whales, sea turtles and sharks, known as bi-kill." "If we're to imagine this same practice happening on the African savannah, targeting gazelle but in the process scooping up every single lion giraffe, ostrich and elephant nobody would stand for it." "Yet this is what is happening in our oceans every single day." "Between 40 and 50 million sharks each year are killed in fishing lines and fishing nets as bi-kill." "Then their fins might be cut off, or not cut off but they're caught initially as bi-kill, and it's from fishing." "It's from fishing in a sustainable manner, in many cases for fish that are labeled "sustainable" by, for instance, Oceana and the sustainable-certified organizations." "So my thought is, why would we want to stop at banning shark-fin soup if you're concerned about sharks?" "Which all these organizations are, and most of the public at large is now." "If we really are concerned about sharks, we would ban fishing." "I went on the world's largest ocean-conservation group's website Oceana, to see what they're doing about this." "On their site, along with a TED Talk by CEO Andy Sharpless I was astounded to read they actually recommend that one of the best ways to help fish is to eat fish." "With the world's fish population in near-collapse this seems like saying the best way to help endangered pandas is to eat pandas." "I couldn't understand how Oceana could say we could remove close to 100 million tons offish per year and that could somehow be sustainable and good for our oceans." "Many of the species that are nearing extinction have done so been ravaged and become nearly extinct, in a declining fashion and haven't recovered on the watch of Oceana and on the watch of Marine Stewardship Council and very much on the watch of Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch." "I mention in a lecture, they're aptly named, because that's what they're doing." "They're sort of watching this happen instead of aggressively halting it." "According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization roughly three-quarters of all fisheries are either fully exploited or over exploited." "So there's really not a whole lot offish stocks out there that you might consider at healthy levels for the ecosystem." "Watching Andy's TED Talk about feeding the world in 1988, fish catch, as you mention, peaked at 85 million tons." "How is it possible that we can sustainably catch 100 million tons by 2050 regardless if it's in a farm or if it's in the ocean?" "If for every pound offish you're taking out you're essentially taking out 5 pounds of wild fish no matter whether it's a pond or it's in the ocean how can that be sustainable?" "The ultimate question, right is that there is a tremendous amount of natural production that is, you know, basically coming out of the oceans all the time." "So we have major-A massive amount of upwelling from our ocean conveyer belt that's bringing up ancient, thousand-year-old nutrients and our ecosystems a returning that into fish." "Yes, they're eating each other and you're losing some of that production every step up in the food chain but you get more every year." "You can fish and take some out, and next year there will be more." "And if we do that right, without ultimately hitting the fundamental driver it's sort of like living off the interest, right?" "As long as you don't bring your principal down, right if you invest in something, as long as you don't hit into that principal your principal remains high, you could potentially live off the interest forever." "That's the basic idea with fish." "With our population right now, what we're doing if it's 75-percent depleted, the fish is now depleted..." "And, you know, it's a good analogy with money." "We're not living off our interest, we're in extreme debt." "And if our population, who's trying to live as a family on the same amount of money, and it's increasing 35 percent..." " ...to 9 billion people..." " Right." "...Isn't it just, "Hey, we gotta stop spending money"?" " Yeah." " "Stop eating fish."" "Well, if you could bring the principal back." "Fishing of any type is depleting not only the species but you get into this serial depletion where one fish species will be minimized and the fishing industry for that fishery will move onto the next species." "It's called serial depletion." "It's aptly named." "In the process, the fish are being lost." "Not only the species is being lost, but the next in line is being lost." "And then the mechanism is still extremely destructive." "So they're losing the fish species, but it needs to be kept in mind they're also destroying habitat." "They came up with this term "sustainable fishing" to make us feel good about eating fish and continuing to take fish out of the oceans when, in fact, it's Sea Shepherd's position that there is no such thing as sustainable fishing." "Fishing is not a sustainable protein source for the feeding of the planet." "For the people on the planet, it's just not." "People don't wanna hear it." "That makes them feel like they have to take action stop doing something, and a lot of people don't want to." "They don't put it out there, because it's uncomfortable to tell people what to do." "But we're at a point where we all have to be cognizant." "And we have to realize and take an action." "Our founder, Captain Watson, likes to say:" ""If the oceans die, we die." That's not a tagline." "That's the truth." "Perhaps the only other ecosystem that is being destroyed at such a rapid rate are the world's rainforests." "Our global rainforests are essentially the planet's lungs." "They breathe in CO2 and exhale oxygen." "An acre of rain forest is cleared every second." "And the leading cause is to graze animals and grow their feed crops." "That is essentially an entire football field cleared every single second." "And it is estimated that every day close to 100 plant, animal, and insect species are lost due to rainforest destruction." "What is the absolute leading cause of rain forest destruction?" "Human intervention into rainforests is the leading cause." "And so it's either for logging or it's for agribusiness." "That's when you're looking at the top global drivers it will vary a bit by the rainforest that you're talking about but the way that we're choosing to use these natural resources on a large industrial scale is the leading driver." "When I went on R.A.N.'s website I couldn't believe I didn't see anything about cattle." "But I did see they had a large campaign against palm oil." "Palm oil plantations cause tremendous deforestation in the Indonesian rainforest." "It is estimated that palm oil is responsible for26 million acres being cleared though compared to livestock and their feed crops they were responsible for136 million acres of rainforest lost to date." "But on their website, I was shocked to find cattle was not included as one of their four main key issues." "Instead they focused on palm, pulp and paper, coal, and tar sands?" "How could they not have the leading cause of rain forest destruction?" "I had to wonder, why focus on fossil fuels and not cattle?" "Ls it more fossil fuels, or is it more animal agriculture?" "I don't know why we would do a one-or-the-other." "I'm just wondering, what more is it?" "I don't necessarily know what it is." "Could the executive director of one of the world's largest rainforest protection groups honestly not know what was going on?" "Or even worse, were they hiding it on purpose?" "And if so, why?" "I went to Amazon Watch to see if they would say what the leading cause of rain forest destruction truly is." "The most biologically and culturally diverse place on the planet is under massive attack right now." "The Amazon rainforest itself could be gone in the matter of the next 10years." "What is the leading cause of rain forest destruction?" "The leading cause of rain forest destruction I would say..." "Well, just to put it in the context of what Amazon Watch works on there's many, many drivers of deforestation, as we call them many different reasons and ways that rainforests are destroyed." "The main-The ones that cause the most damage and are the most wide spread are mega projects such as oil and gas pipelines, such as mining projects such as mega dam projects." "We're not talking about..." "I felt like I was going in circles with these groups." "As if I were stuck in some strange "cowspiracy" twilight zone where no one could talk about cows." "I couldn't believe these organizations just wouldn't say what the leading cause of rain forest destruction truly is." "I had to ask one more time." "It's hard to say what is the leading cause of deforestation of the Amazon because they're all destructive, oil and gas, mining, dams, agriculture." "But in terms of land use, in terms of the amount of land that is destroyed by..." "When we talk about in comparison, all those different causes of deforestation what is causing the most trees to fall, for example I think it would definitely be agriculture." "Unfortunately one of the biggest causes of deforestation definitely in the Brazilian Amazon, is agribusiness." "Cattle grazing and soy production, in particular." "This is really what's going on." "Why do you think that's...?" "Like, no one at Greenpeace, or no one's really saying the whole story." "The whole story about the main cause of deforestation?" "Yeah." "You've brought up some really good points about why isn't anybody doing anything about this?" "And I think in Brazil, in particular, when we look at, you know what happened after the Forest Code was passed and people who were standing up against the lobbyists and the interests the special interests, the cattle industry, the agribusiness industry what was happening to them?" "People who were speaking out got killed." "And if you look at, you know, Z Carlos, you look at Claudio..." "People who were putting themselves out there and saying cattle ranching, you know, is destroying the Amazon a lot of those people who really put themselves out there..." "And look at Dorothy Stang, you know, the nun who lived out in Para who was killed." "A lot of people will speak up." "A lot of people just keep their mouths shut because they don't wanna be the next one with the bullet to their head." "Sister Dorothy Stang was a U.S.-born nun living in the heart of the Brazilian rainforest." "Her life's work was to protect the Amazon." "She spoke out openly against the destruction of rain forest from cattle ranching for years." "Walking home one night, she was brutally gunned down at point-blank range by a hired gun from the cattle industry." "After Greenpeace's initial denial for an interview I wrote again, begging they reconsider." "Greenpeace got back again, and said again:" ""I'm afraid we've explored the options here in terms of helping you and are not going to be able to be involved this time." "You mentioned you were also speaking to Oceana." "I'm sure they'll be able to give you some great quotes about ocean-related issues." "Thanks again for thinking of us."" "Unbelievable." "With Greenpeace unwilling to be interviewed I had to find a different avenue for answers." "There's something really fishy going on over there." "Fortunately I found a former Greenpeace board of director who now speaks openly about the industry." "Environmental organizations, like other organizations, aren't telling you the truth about what the world needs from us as a species." "It's so frustrating when the information is right before their eyes." "It's documented in peer-reviewed papers and journals." "It's there for every body to see." "But the environmental organizations are refusing to act." "Nowhere do you find in their policies and nowhere do you find in the Greenpeace mission that diet is important that animal agriculture is the problem." "They are refusing, like other environmental organizations to look at the issue." "The environmental community is failing us and they're failing ecosystems." "And it's so frustrating to see them do this." ""NRDC, the Earth's best defense."" "All right, so here they actually do have a few things on animal agriculture." "The leading cause of environmental degradation is too much pollution and too many engines churning too fast in too many places around the globe." "Late in 2009, World watch reported that livestock causes 51 percent of green house gas emissions and transportation's around 13." "And on the low end, the U.N. was around 18 to 30 which is more than all transportation all put together." "National-Internationally?" " Or nationally?" " The entire globe." "Yeah." "I think energy production and transportation are still major sources, so I think..." "I'm not gonna comment on that because I'm not familiar with those numbers." "So it's..." "Don't quote me on this, but that's cow farts." "That's, I think, what that is." "It's..." "I think that's cow farts." "Well, that's part of the story." "Methane production from cows and livestock's flatulence is a major contributor." "But mostly it is due to deforestation and the waste they produce which is 130times more waste than the entire human population." "Virtually all without the benefit of any waste treatment." "NRDC absolutely, as I said, has a food program." "In fact, we just..." "Every year we do the Growing Green Awards and we recognize food innovators, and this last year one of the awardees was a sustainable pork producer, actually that doesn't use any antibiotics." "And also the antibiotic use that industrial food production in the United States uses right now is..." "We're giving..." "The majority of antibiotics in the United States are administered to healthy livestock." "I wanted to visit one of these sustainable farms." "I found the Markegard Grass-Fed beef farm on the lush, misty California coast." "I met Erik and Doniga Markegard and their four children." "Lea and Larry are usually up at 6 and out milking the cows slopping the hogs." "All together, we graze about 4500 acres." "And this is our home ranch." "And this is 952 acres of that." "On average, it's about one cow, or a cow and a calf, per every 10 acres." "We would produce annually roughly 80,000 pounds of finished, plate-ready meat." "We keep about 10 pigs in roughly a50-acre area and we move them around in 10-acre pastures." "Some people think that pigs are dirty and gross, but I really like them." "They have..." "They know people, and they'll befriends and really nice." "And they could be like your best friend, or could be like a sister." "See?" "They know you when you get to know them." "I mean, I shouldn't be bonding, but we have to have nice pigs." "Why shouldn't you bond with them?" "Well, because they're gonna turn into bacon." " These pigs are about 7 months old now." " That's it?" "So these bigger ones are getting ready to be killed." "Those two smaller ones there, you know, they could grow up a few more months." "I love animals." "That's why I'm in the meat business." "It's what more of society needs to see is that that packaged piece of meat is a living animal." "Living and breathing creature that..." "Yeah, it's hard, it's hard, but like what Doniga said earlier we do it because we love them." "With the land use, there's anywhere between..." "With industrial, as low as 2to 2.5 acres per cow all the way up to some, depending- It's not as lush as this." "Up to 35 acres." "Yeah, we have a ranch in South Dakota that's 50 acres." " Fifty acres per...?" " Yeah, it's about 50 acres." "Yeah." "And why is that?" "Same thing, it was just farmed and robbed of all the nitrogen..." " The land was abused." " It's also seasonal, right?" "And it's also seasonal." "Ls it possible and is it practical for the whole world to say:" ""Have grass-fed cattle"?" "I mean, like, say Brazil, where, you know supposedly 80 percent of the rainforest was destroyed for cattle what are your thoughts on that?" "They shouldn't be eating beef." "If their environment wasn't designed to raise beef..." " ...then they shouldn't be eating it." " Yeah." "How do you offset the carbon footprint of livestock?" "We don't feel like livestock have a carbon footprint." "I left there feeling confused." "As far as grass-fed beef not having a carbon footprint it sounded like it could make sense until added up the numbers on land use and population." "If we're to use the Markegard model of raising animals which requires 4500 acres producing 80,000 pounds of meat the average American eats 209 pounds of meat per year." "If that was all grass-fed beef, only 382 people could be fed on their land." "That equates to 11.7 acres per person times 314 million Americans which equals 3.7 billion acres of grazing land." "Unfortunately there are only I.9 billion acres in the U.S.' lower48 states." "Currently nearly half of all U.S. land is already dedicated to animal agriculture." "If we're to switch to grass-fed beef it would require clearing every square inch of the U.S up into Canada, all of Central America, and well into South America." "And this is just to feed the United States' demand on meat." "But that figure doesn't even take into consideration that much of that land isn't suited to graze livestock." "We would have to convert all mountain ranges to grassland." "Clear ancient forests and national parks to grazing." "And demolish every city just to make room to graze cows." "Just like Brazil, the United States isn't suited to meet the demands for meat." "It takes 23 months fora grass-fed animal to grow to the size and age that it's slaughtered, whereas a grain-fed takes 15 months." "So that's an additional eight months of water use, land use, feed, waste and in terms of a carbon footprint, that's a huge difference." "Turns out, due to land use grass-fed beef is more unsustainable than even factory farming." "I had to come to terms with the fact there was no way to sustainably raise enough animals to feed the world's current demand on meat and had my doubts on dairy as well." "But I did want to talk with a premier organic dairy company to see if they believed their product was sustainable for the world's population." "It requires a lot of inputs to produce milk." "The feed, the water, the land." "It does." "And it may not be practical to expect that there can be enough dairy production produced in a sustainable way to feed the entire world." "I just don't think that that's necessarily a given." "I think it's maybe too much to expect that the world can be fed with dairy in a sustainable way." "I don't know the answer, but common sense would say that's along shot." "I was shocked to hear such an honest answer." "If this is what the dairy CEO would say, I wondered what the farmer would claim." "Based on their marketing it seemed their farms were an oasis for cows." "It was not what I expected." "Typically a cow will eat 140to 150 pounds of feed a day." " A hundred and forty...?" " Forty to 50 pounds of feed every day." "And then she's also gonna drink between 30 and 40 gallons of water." "Oh, my Lord." "Probably go through about 20 tons per week." " Twenty tons of grain per week." " Twenty tons of grain." "For...?" "Primarily for our milking cows, so about 250 cows." "Yeah, so the biggest part of sustainability to me the number one thing on the list should be profitability." "So how the process completely works, from start to finish is the cow needs to have a baby in order to give milk." "And so she'll have her baby." "That baby's gonna stay with the mother for at least two days." "The babies will go off to our calf-raising facility so they have an individual hutch that they'll be raised in." "Since we're a dairy, it's only the girl cows that give us milk." "So the boys, on typical dairies, they're sold off to beef-raising facilities." "But we do keep approximately half and we raise them for two years and sell them as organic grass-fed beef." "So all dairy cows eventually go to the beef industry?" "At some point she'll really drop off." "So you have to make a business decision at that point:" "Are you gonna keep investing in her to give milk or are you gonna sell her off again to another dairy, or into the beef industry?" "There's very few places on this planet that have this type of environment." "But the demand on dairy-based protein in the world is only gonna increase." "And there's not enough land on the planet to do this type of dairying around the world." "It's just the environment is not gonna be that way." "The land's not there." "So I guess on a global scale the conclusion would be dairy's not sustainable." "Unless we start digging up houses and putting pastures back." "And the only way to start digging up houses and development is to have less people." "But we only know that the population is gonna continue to grow." "So that means more commercial dairying, I'm sure." "Either that or somehow lower demand by the people?" "Yeah, or some other product's gonna take its place." "We see there are all sorts of soy milks and almond milk and a lot of other products that are coming out." "And different blends, you know, where you take juices and proteins." "I think you'll see a lot more of that." "He was right." "How could cows' milk be sustainable?" "For one gallon of milk, it takes upwards of 1000 gallons of water to produce." "Doing research on grass-fed livestock I kept coming across the work of Allan Savory." "Almost a third of the planet's land is becoming desert with the vast majority due to livestock grazing." "Savory claims that the best way to reverse this desertification is to actually graze more animals." "This reminded me of Oceana saying the best way to help fish is to eat fish." "This is the same man during the 1950s working as a research officer for the Game Department of what is now Zimbabwe came up with a theory, in spite of scientific evidence that actually elephants were the cause of desertification there." "And his solution was convincing the government to kill 40,000 elephants." "Yet after 14years of relentless slaughter, the conditions only got worse." "His theory was wrong." "The culling finally ended but not until tens of thousands of elephants and their families were killed." "This is not someone I would ever take ecological advice from." "It turns out the cattle industry is having the same effect on wildlife in the United States." "The government has been rounding up horses en masse." "We now have more wild horses and burros in government holding facilities..." "Fifty-thousand wild horses and burros." "...Than we have free on the range." "Basically you have ranchers who get to graze on our public lands for a fraction of the going rate." "They're getting this huge tax subsidy." "It's about one-fifteenth of the going rate." "And the Bureau of Land Management has to say:" ""How much forage and water is on the land?"" "And then they divvy it up." "They give so much to the cows, so much to, you know, "wildlife" and so much to the wild horses and burros." "And what we see is the lion's share of the forage and water is going to the livestock industry." "And then they scapegoat the horses and burros and say:" ""Oh, there are too many horses and burros." "Let's remove them."" "I always tell people, wild horses and burros are just one of the victims of the management of our public lands for livestock because we also see the predator-killing going on." "We know wolves are now being targeted by ranchers, to get rid of wolves." "USDA has aircraft, and all they do is aerial gunning of predators." "All a rancher does is call up and say, "I've got coyote here."" "They'll come over and shoot the coyote." "Or they'll shoot the mountain lion or the bobcat." "And this is all for ranching." "In Washington State, after cattle were found to be attacked on public lands where they were grazing under permit Washington State decided to kill the entire Wedge pack of wolves." "And those wolves were not introduced." "They had in-migrated from Canada." "But they're no longer there." "And it starts at the local level, with the Bureau of Land Managements but then it goes all the way to Congress." "And we see Congress willing to allow this type of mismanagement of our public lands to continue." "It is the insistence of, and the lobbying power of the animal agriculture industry that continues to see wolves killed continues to see an insistence that predators be maintained at a low level that does not benefit ecosystems." "I've seen so many pieces of land, looked at so many environmental assessments from the Bureau of Land Management where they say the range lands are not meeting standards." "And they say, straight-up, livestock grazing is a cause for not meeting range standards." "And yet they will continue to allow livestock grazing." "They're at the very core of making sure that cougars are treed by hounds and that wolf packs are run down and that hunting seasons are opened up year-round and that traps are set so that they can suffer." "If anyone cares about wild horses and wildlife and public lands and the environment, you can't ignore the livestock..." "The negative impact that livestock grazing is having on our public lands in the West." "I've added up the costs of animal food production that the producers don't actually bear themselves." "These are the hidden costs or the externalized costs that they impose on society." "And those are in categories like health care, environmental damage subsidies, damage to fisheries, and even cruelty." "If you take those externalized costs, which are about $414 billion if the meat and dairy industries were required to internalize those costs if they had to bear those costs themselves the costs of the retail prices of meat and dairy would sky rocket." "So a$5 carton of eggs would go to $13." "A $4 Big Mac would go to $11." "The problem with these externalized costs being imposed on society is that whether you eat meat or not whether you're an omnivore oran herbivore you are paying part of the costs of somebody else's consumption." "So when somebody goes into a McDonald's and buys a Big Macfor$4 there's another$7 of costs that's imposed on society." "I'm paying that." "You're paying that, whether you eat meat or not." "When you look at who's benefiting, and who lobbied for this system of agriculture it's the largest food producers in the country and the largest meat producers." "And once they become so large and wealthy then they can dictate the federal policies around producing food because they have so much political power." "Was this why Al Gore, even during his vice presidency never addressed the issue of animal agriculture and failed to talk about it in An Inconvenient Truth or his organization, The Climate Reality Project?" "Was this truth just too inconvenient for even him?" "I felt let down by the man who inspired me on this entire path." "I knew I needed to talk to an animal agriculture lobby group to see what they had to say." "If they could silence the government, are they influencing and possibly have connections to these environmental groups as well?" "Animal Agriculture Alliance, one of the biggest livestock lobby groups has agreed to an interview." "Greenpeace won't give us an interview but Animal Agriculture Alliance has agreed to an interview." "Now, that..." "Now, that is saying something." "People hear the word GMOs, and that's a really scary term." "Agriculture's kind of struggled to explain what that means, but in reality what we've done is to use technology to make advancements in how we raise crops and how we raise animals." "We're not gonna feed the world going back to how it was 100 years ago where all the animals were, you know, pasture-fed." "We didn't just move animals inside and just implement these large vertically-integrated systems because of sustainability." "It certainly reduces the environmental impact while improving animal well-being and food safety." "So you're saying that animals like it just as much being inside say, the chickens and the cows like being just as much inside as pasture grass-fed?" "In a lot of cases, it's been a significant improvement in their well-being just in terms of the amount of care they can get, individualized care." "Does the meat and dairy industry ever support or donate to environmental non-profits?" "I don't know that I would want to comment on that." "Yeah, I..." "I don't..." "I don't know." "I don't know that we would know what they donate to." "Does meat and dairy industry ever support or donate to, say, Greenpeace?" "Again, I don't know that I would feel comfortable..." "Hey, sorry we didn't get back to you earlier." "I have some bad news." "We are no longer able to fund your film project." "We had a meeting and due to the growing controversial subject matter we have some concerns and have to pull out." "Why was this subject so controversial?" "The first person I could think to speak with was Howard Lyman who had been sued by cattlemen for simply speaking the truth about animal agriculture on The Oprah Winfrey Show." "I was born on the largest dairy farm in the state of Montana in 1938." "Grew up my entire life on a livestock farm." "Grew up my entire life on a livestock farm." "Went to Montana State University, got a degree in Agriculture." "Came back and started a mega agriculture endeavor where I had 10,000 acres of crop 7000 head of cattle and about 30 employees." "Solspent45 years of my life in animal agriculture." "And so I've been there, done that." "When I was on The Oprah Show, we had the food disparagement law." "Now, the food disparagement law, in my opinion, was unconstitutional but what it basically said, that it was against the law to say something you knew to be false about a perishable commodity." "I didn't say anything on The Oprah Show I thought to be false." "I went there and told the truth." "Now, it took five years and hundreds of thousands of dollars to end up extricating myself from the suits from the cattle industry." "But if I was to go on The Oprah Show today say exactly the same thing today that I said back then I would be guilty." "And for me, when they were talking about the food disparagement law it was the fact of whether I told the truth or not." "You can go today and tell the truth and you will be guilty because if you cause a disruption in the profits of the animal industry you're guilty under the Patriot Act." "Do you think there should be any concern of us making this documentary?" "Of course." "If you don't realize right now that you're putting your neck on the chopping block you know, you better take that camera and throw it away." "Animal agriculture is one of the most powerful industries on the planet." "I think most people in this country are aware of the influence of money and industry on politics, and we really see that clearly on display with this industry in particular." "Most would be shocked to learn that animal rights and environmental activists are the number one domestic terrorism threat according to the fbi." " And why is that?" " It's difficult to answer why these groups are at the top of the FBI's priorities." "I think a big part of it is that they more than really any other social movements today are directly threatening corporate profits." "You know, when we try to find out how factory farms and how animal agriculture is polluting the environment they try to claim exemptions to that information either under national security terms or public safety." "Trademark issues." "It's a business secret." "All these attempts to keep people in the dark about what they're actually doing." "One of the largest industries on the planet with the biggest environmental impact keeping us in the dark about how it's operating." "Through the Freedom of Information Act, we obtained documents from the counter-terrorism unit that show they're monitoring my lectures media interviews, like this one, my website, my book." "Are we at risk filming this and showing it?" "You're going up against people that have massive legal resources." "I mean, it's just overwhelming, the amount of money at their disposal." "And you have nothing." "And I think that fear is a big part of the tactic as well." "Will was right.I was scared." "When I learned about activists being killed in Brazil I was disturbed, but I felt removed." "But to learn about American activists and journalists being targeted by the industry and fbi?" "My funding being dropped?" "I was genuinely worried and hit close to home." "Was this why no one was willing to talk about the issue?" "I decided to take precautionary measures with all the footage I shot." "I was beyond frightened to imagine what could possibly happen if I pursued this subject any further." "It seemed the only decision to make was to put down the cameras and walk away." "But then I realized this issue was way bigger than any personal concern I could ever have for myself." "This was about all life on Earth hanging in the balance of our actions." "Now you either live for something, or die for nothing." "And I actually had no choice all along." "I decided to surrender not to fear from the secret but rather to a cause towards truth." "I couldn't be like these environmental organizations and sit silently while the planet was eaten alive right in front of our eyes." "I had to stand up and continue on." "Some people would say the problem isn't really animal agriculture but actually human overpopulation." "In 1812, there were 1 billion people on the planet." "In 1912, there were 1.5 billion." "Then just 100 years later, our population exploded to 7 billion humans." "This number is rightly given a great deal of attention but an even more important figure when determining world population is the world's 70 billion farm animals humans raise." "The human population drinks 5.2 billion gallons of water every day and eats 21 billion pounds of food." "But just the world's 1.5 billion cows alone drink 45 billion gallons of water every day and eat 135 billion pounds of food." "This isn't so much a human population issue." "It's a human-eating-animals population issue." "Environmental organizations not addressing this is like health organizations trying to stop lung cancer without addressing cigarette smoking." "But instead of secondhand smoking, it's secondhand eating which affects the entire planet." "We're growing enough food right now to feed between 12 and 15 billion people." "We only have 7 billion people." "We have roughly a billion people starving every single day." "Worldwide, 50 percent of the grain and legumes that we're growing we're feeding to animals." "So they're eating huge amounts of grain and legumes." "In the United States, it's more like closer to 70, 80, depending on which grain it is." "About 90 percent of the soybeans." "Eighty-two percent of starving children live in countries where food is fed to animals in livestock systems that are killed and eaten by more well-off individuals in developed countries such as the U.S. and Europe." "The fact of it is that we could feed every human being on the planet today an adequate diet if we did no more than take the feed that we're feeding to animals and actually turn it into food for humans." "And so somebody trying to justify GMOs that's like trying to give a drowning man a drink of water." "You can produce, on average, 15 times more protein from plant-based sources than from meat on any given area of land whether it's..." "Using the same type of land whether it's a very fertile area in one area of the world or it's an area that's depleted." "If we would reduce the amount of meat we're eating, and dairy and eggs we could allow all these mono-cropped fields of genetically-engineered corn and soybeans to revert back to forest again, to be habitat for animals." "You know, any time somebody tells you that we can't grow food for humans on the land that we're growing feed for animals this is somebody that" "Evoking the number one crop out in California." "The fact of it is if you can grow corn to stuff down the throat of an animal you can actually grow corn and feed it to a human." "You encourage people to eat less meat, for the resources required and the toll on the environment." " And on the animal." " And on the animals." "And the workers in the system." "It's a brutal system at every level." "As the world population continues to grow to almost 9 billion people do you foresee someday that we might just completely have to stop eating meat altogether?" "I don't know that we'll completely stop." "I think that the amount of meat-eating will decline." "There's no way to support 9 ounces per person per day which is what Americans are eating now." "If the Chinese alone decide they wanna eat that much..." "And they've decided they wanna eat that much." "We just can't..." "We don't have enough world to produce the grain to generate that much meat." "I think a plant-based diet is the most sustainable." "What do you recommend to see for9 billion people can eat for the planet to not only sustain, but to thrive?" "Would you throw out a numb...?" "Like an ounce, one ounce?" " Oh, per meat?" " And including dairy." "Yeah, I don't think I know enough." "But, yeah, it would be on the order of a couple ounces a week." "You know, it's not gonna be the way we're eating it now." "We're gorging on meat." "We're eating huge amounts." " Does that include cheese too?" " Yeah, yeah." " Like, two ounces total?" " Yeah, cheese and milk." " Like, two ounces total?" " Yeah, cheese and milk." "Only2 ounces a week seem like nothing." "People could probably raise that in their own backyard." "Maybe backyard farming was a sustainable solution." "I have 42 ducks." "I started off with three ducks three years ago." "And then those burdened into a population." "I buy a 75-pound bag of seed and that seed bag will last me, right now, about two weeks." "The ducks now that we're gonna be culling are about 2 years old." "When you're living with them, they get used to you." "You know, they're not intimidated or whatever." "And so they make all their vocal sounds, like natural." "Slow down." "Easy, easy, easy." "Okay." "No, we're gonna keep you." "Ron, these two go first." "Being smart-wise?" "Compared to a chicken, they're probably the same." " That one's nice, see?" " Yeah, he is." "Alrighty." "Okay." "Right there." "That's gonna be a little gruesome." "How could that still be alive?" "How could that still be alive?" "They're not." "That's nerves." "A nerve reaction." "Five years old or something like that, I think it was the first time my dad came out and made us watch as we did rabbits." "And we'd raise probably a couple dozen rabbits each year." "And then we would take those rabbits and skin them and clean them up and keep them for food." "As a young kid, I was kind of..." "I don't want to say it was hard, but it was kind of, from my memory..." "Because some of the rabbits I had named." "So I was kind of like going..." "But after doing it a couple times, you kind of just learned it's just something that has to be done." "Not the fingers." "I just can't do it." "I don't think I could have someone else do it for me, if I can't do it." "If I can't do it, I don't want someone else doing it for me." "And then sustainability..." "For sustainability, 75 pounds is 2 pounds per" "So it's a pound per week per duck." "Fifty-two weeks, 110..." "So it's 110 pounds of food for I to 1.5 pounds of meat." "So on a sustainability issue, it's 100to 1." "And that grain gets..." "You know, who knows where that grain comes from?" "But, I mean, when it gets to this point, it's not even about sustainability it was just..." "You know, I don't feel real good inside." "It was the first time I've ever seen that." "So kind of..." "Yeah." "I'd been so caught up in the destruction caused by animal agriculture I realized I'd never truly dwelled on the obvious reality that every one of these animals was killed." "It was always a disconnected, abstract fact of eating meat." "But when it became personal, face to face, the story changed." "I had scheduled weeks in advance to film another backyard slaughter of a chicken that stopped producing eggs." "I didn't know how I was gonna possibly go through another slaughter." "So I didn't." "Animal Place is a farm animal sanctuary in Northern California that focuses on rescuing animals from the animal agriculture industry." "A lot of people don't realize, meat-breed chickens like this guy behind us they're generally slaughtered at about42 days old." "Whereas chickens that are bred for egg production are killed when their productivity starts to decrease when they start laying less eggs." "And that generally happens about 18 months to 20 months." "It doesn't matter if you buy caged eggs, eggs from cage-free farms or free-range or pasture-based farms." "Hi, Carol." "It doesn't matter." "Turns out there's a successful movement of sustainable animal-alternative food producers based right here in California funded by big names like Bill Gates and Biz Stone." "When egg-laying hens eat all that soy and corn you have an energy conversion ratio at about 38 to 1 whereas alternatively you can find plants you can grow those plants and convert those plants into food." "The energy conversion ratio for the plants we're using to replace the eggs is about 2to 1, compared to 38to 1 for eggs." "So our explicit goal is to have the maximum amount of impact by creating this new model that makes the global egg industry entirely obsolete." "We're making Omega products proving we make better tasting food that's great for you and it takes one-twentieth of the land and resources that dairy do." "If you could have the fiber structure, satiating bite, protein and all the nutritional benefits of meat without having animal protein itself and by doing that you could address climate change the human health epidemics that we're seeing, animal welfare and natural resource conservation, would you make the change?" "But what if people just ate less animal products?" "Like going meatless on Mondays." "When you go meatless on Monday, you essentially contribute to climate change, pollution depletion of our planet's resources and your own health then on only six days of the week, instead of seven." "You're creating a false justification, clearly a false justification for what you're doing on those other six days." "So in other words, we really shouldn't be resting on our laurels of what you do right only one-seventh of the time." "You can't be an environmentalist and eat animal products, period." "Kid yourself if you want, if you want to feed your addiction, so be it." "But don't call yourself an environmentalist." "I knew I had to stop eating all animal products." "I wanted to help the planet be sustainable, but I needed to sustain myself." "I had doubts about being healthy and not eating meat, dairy and eggs." "All I knew was the standard American diet I grew up on." "Ls it even possible to be a healthy vegetarian or vegan?" "Ls it possible to be a healthy vegetarian or vegan?" "I became vegan for, let's see, 32 years ago now." "And I run several miles every day." "I go biking 40, 50 miles through the countryside." "I work long hours." "I feel great." "It's nice waking up in alight, trim body everyday." "And so many of my vegan friends and patients are just thriving since their transition to a vegan diet." "So, yes, and I've seen vegan moms go through healthy vegan pregnancies and deliver healthy vegan children and raise them to tall, full-sized, intelligent vegan adults." "And, yes, certainly all the nutrients are there in the plant kingdom to do this that is correct." "Think anyone should be consuming dairy?" "I really don't." "When you think about it, the purpose of cows' milk..." "I did most of my growing up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin." "The purpose of cows' milk is to turn a 65-pound calf into a400-pound cow as rapidly as possible." "Cows' milk is baby-calf growth fluid." "It's what the stuff is." "Everything in that white liquid, the hormones, the lipids, the proteins the sodium, the growth factors, the IGF every one of those is meant to blow that calf up to a great big cow or it wouldn't be there." "And whether you pour it on your cereal as a liquid whether you clot it into yogurt whether you ferment it into cheese whether you freeze it into ice cream it's baby-calf growth fluid." "And women eat it and it stimulates their tissues and gives women breast lumps, it makes the uterus get big and they get fibroids and they bleed and they get hysterectomies and they need mammograms and gives guys man boobs." "This is..." "Cows' milk is the lactation secretions of a large bovine mammal who just had a baby." "It's for baby calves." "I tell my patients, "Go look in the mirror." "Do you have big ears, a tail, are you a baby calf?" "If you're not, don't be eating baby-calf growth fluid."" "In any level, there's nothing in it people need." "In any level, there's nothing in it people need." "It was a relief to hear I didn't have to eat animal products to be healthy and even thrive but I still thought you needed animal manure to grow organic agriculture." "Turns out there's an entire movement with people growing food without any animal inputs." "I visited Earthworks Urban Farm in Detroit." "They work with and grow food for the low-income community." "We tend to see ourselves as individuals in a bubble and forget that we in habit this land and this earth with other creatures." "So we have to learn how to share more, I guess." "Jah here is working on his garden." "You'd be surprised what you can do with not a lot of space." "About a4-by-8, yeah." "What's your goal this year?" "How much do you think you can maximize?" " I would push for 100 at least.At least." " A hundred pounds." "That's amazing." "The one full year after this was constructed we doubled our yield to over 14,000 pounds of food." "Fourteen-thousand pounds?" "On about how many acres?" "About two and a half." "So as much food as we produce and we grow or the earth helps us grow we also have to return those nutrients back to the soil." "We think of our work as being regenerative." "That we're putting as much life-giving substance in the ground as we're taking out." "So is it just kind of healthier and safer to use vegetarian..." " ...or vegetable composting stuff?" " Yeah, that's what we found." "But also because it takes less time and it's a lot easier to manage." " A lot easier, yeah." " Yeah." " And the soil is just as rich?" " Yeah, absolutely." "Not only is veganic more compassionate, it's also more efficient." "And in a society with this many billions of people we need to be as efficient as possible." "Some people might go back and say if we embraced this primitive approach of only wild animals everywhere and we go back to, like, a hunter-gatherer system that sounds great." "But that was 10 million people on the entire continent." "Maybe a little bit more, a little bit less, no one really knows." "Today, now we have what?" "We have 320 million in the U.S., 25 million in Canada another 100 and so-many-million in Mexico." "So, North America is up to almost, you know, 450 million people." "Trying to figure out away to bring animal agriculture in balance with450 million hungry people is impossible." "This is amazing, I didn't believe it when I first learned it but 216,000 more people are born to the plant every day." "Everyday." "It's extraordinary." "But what's really extraordinary is you need, per day 34,000 new acres of farmable land." "It's not happening." "To feed a person on a vegan diet for a year requires just one-sixth of an acre of land." "To feed that same person on a vegetarian diet that includes eggs and dairy requires three times as much land." "To feed an average U.S. citizen's high-consumption diet of meat, dairy and eggs requires 18 times as much land." "This is because you can produce 37,000 pounds of vegetables on 1.5 acres, but only 375 pounds of meat on that same plot of land." "The comparison doesn't end with land use." "A vegan diet produces half as much CO2 as an American omnivore uses one-eleventh the amount of fossil fuels one-thirteenth the amount of water and an eighteenth of the amount of land." "After adding this all up, I realized I had the choice every single day to save over 100 gallons of water, 45 pounds of grain 30 square feet of forested land, the equivalent of20 pounds ofCO2 and one animal's life every single day." "If we all did go vegan and moved away from animal foods and toward a plant-based diet, what would happen?" "If we didn't kill all these cows and eat them then we wouldn't have to breed all these cows because we're breeding cows and chickens and pigs and fish." "We're breeding them over and over again, relentlessly." "So if we didn't breed them, then we wouldn't have to feed them." "Then we wouldn't have to devote all this land to growing grains and legumes and so forth to feed to them." "And so then the forest could come back." "Wildlife could come back." "The oceans would come back." "The rivers would run clean again." "The air would come back." "Our health would return." "Renewable energy infrastructure, such as solar and wind generators to reduce climate change, that's a pretty good idea but it's projected to take at least 20 years and at least, minimally, $18 trillion to develop." "You know, it's important to realize that we don't have that long of a time frame." "We just talked about how it might be a four-year time frame so we don't have 20 years and we don't have $18 trillion to develop these so another solution to climate change:" "We could stop eating animals." "And it could be done today." "It doesn't have to take 20years and it doesn't have to take $18 trillion, because it costs nothing." "Some say, "Fix CO2, then worry about methane."" "It's the other way." "Do something about methane, you'll get a response right away." "The most powerful thing that someone can do for the environment no other lifestyle choice has a farther reaching and more profoundly positive impact on the planet and all life on Earth than choosing to stop consuming animals and live a vegan lifestyle." "Do you realize 75 percent of Americans consider themselves to be environmentalists?" "You don't think we couldn't solve this problem in a heartbeat?" "I'll tell you what, all we would need is for the environmentalists to live what they profess and we'd be on a new course in the world." "We will not succeed until we stop animal agriculture." "And by "succeed," I mean we will not save ecosystems to the extent necessary we will not have enough food for people around the planet we will not stop global warming we will not stop pollution in the dead zones that run off all the fields of corn and soy that are grown to feed livestock and we will not stop the hunting of wolves and other predators." "Organic farming is one step in the right direction, but we need to keep walking." "We need to get beyond organics." "We need to get to sustainability." "When you take the animal out, you take the greenhouse gas issue out you take the food safety issues out you take some other externalities related to food scarcity out." "But one thing that's amazing is I think you put our values back in." "You put values like compassion and integrity and kindness values that are natural to human beings, you put that in you build that back into the story of our food." "And I think as this begins to progress, I think it also helps people to pause before they eat that egg, before they eat that steak before they eat that chicken nugget and ask themselves, is that really what they want?" "Or do they actually want something more?" "I had to come to the full conclusion the only way to sustainably and ethically live on this planet with 7 billion other people is to live an entirely plant-based vegan diet." "I decided instead of eating others, to eat for others." "At first, like these environmental groups, I was afraid of what it'd mean to change." "But now I embrace it." "All this talk about sustainability sounded like our planet was on life support." "And I don't want her to simply survive or to sustain, but to thrive." "Life today is not about sustainability." "It's about "thrive-ability."" "She's given so much to us for so long, it was time to give back." "A hundred-and-eight percent of everything we have." "It felt good." "It was an alignment." "And we see this movement, not just about providing cheaper inexpensive food that everyone can have, but also a spiritual move." "A move towards understanding who we really are and how we can connect to each other." "Do what you can do as well as you can do it..." "We become part of a gathering momentum of other people." "It's happening." "This is really what's happening." "This is the new." "Selflessness is a nice way to be." "It has all these benefits for yourself, as well as the planet and other people." "So it's a beautiful way to live." "Ecologically, it just feels better." "This is about massively transforming how our society eats, because it's a necessity." "It's acting on what we know." "And acting kindly and gently on the whole planet and with other people to accomplish the goals of living better." "We can do it, but we have to choose to do it." "You can change the world."