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  • #61
    Many of us (and I mean those living in 'Western' civilization probably do eat too much meat, but I don't think becoming completely vegetarian is an option. However, land in Britain could be much more efficiently used - marginal land where hill farmers work is the very best option for raising sheep, areas where there is high rainfall and grass grows well should be devoted to cattle and cows for dairy products. An enormous amount of energy is expended by agri-businesses in planting, harvesting, drying the crops, using artificial fertilisers and pesticides - rain forest is being decimated to produce land to grow soya beans to feed cattle. If we all ate a little less meat and consumed locally grown produce (both meat, fruit and veg) it can only help. We have a large number of highly inefficient power stations in this country - fuel is burned to produce steam, the steam is used to turn turbines which produce the electricity - hot water is a 'by product' and cooling towers are used to dissipate the heat so that much cooler water can be returned to rivers. Rather than dissipate the heat that way, why not use it to warm vast greenhouses (sited near the power stations)- we already have the very hot water. In that way we could lengthen the growing season in this country and not have to import tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuces etc from Spain - we might even be able to avoid having to 'fly in' mange tout and French beans from Zambia, Egypt and the like. The power stations have a tendency to be near areas of large population - it would certainly reduce food miles and the water would be cooled by circulating through pipes that warmed the glass houses. They use glasshouses in Crete and Cyprus to make it warm and humid enough to grow bananas.

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    • #62
      A..m..e..n

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      • #63
        This might be of interest? Just found it on the OU website:

        Hope in a Changing Climate: changing the course of history for millions

        Terracing project in Rwanda
        TX: BBC World News, Friday 27 November
        Screening at COP15 Climate Change conference


        John D. Liu
        As the globe prepares for COP15, a new documentary on BBC World optimistically reframes the debate on global warming. Illustrating that large, decimated eco-systems can be restored, Hope in a Changing Climate, which will have a special screening at COP15, reveals success stories from Ethiopia, Rwanda and China which prove that bringing large areas back from environmental ruin is possible, and key to stabilising the earth’s climate, eradicating poverty and making sustainable agriculture a reality.

        The programme documents the remarkably successful efforts of local people to restore denuded, degraded ecosystems – transforming them into verdant, life-sustaining environments which enable people to break free from entrenched poverty. The film contains breathtaking before and after footage of large-scale restoration projects. Presented by John D. Liu, founder of the Environmental Education Media Project (EEMP) and creator of the film Lessons of the Loess Plateau, the new programme is directed by Jeremy Bristow from the BBC, the award-winning producer of the acclaimed David Attenborough series The Truth about Climate Change.

        The area of restoration on the Loess Plateau in China is the size of Belgium and thousands of years of subsistence farming had made it barren and unfertile. In 1995 The Chinese Government, with support from The World Bank, took drastic action to rehabilitate the plateau, and local people – seen as both perpetuators and victims of the devastation – became part of the solution.

        John D. Liu has been visiting the area for the past fifteen years and in Hope in a Changing Climate travels back to find astounding results. He said: “Human impact on the climate is not simply from the flagrant emission of carbon dioxide and began long before industrial scale emissions. Carbon disequilibrium is a symptom of a larger systemic failure – we are reducing biodiversity, and this has altered fundamental earth processes that we rely on for life. We must act as a species to restore ecosystem function wherever it has been disrupted. We know what is needed; we know it works; and we know from the history of other civilizations that have collapsed what the consequences are of failing to act – and quickly.”

        The film uncovers the dramatic impact of similar projects in Ethiopia and Rwanda. Once the scene of devastating droughts in 1984, Ethiopia has used the same approach as that in China to begin bringing areas of arid land back to productivity and ecological balance. In Rwanda, where ecological degradation from over-farming of wetland areas saw the near failure of the country’s hydro-electricity supply, the Government has undertaken a similar project and seen vast improvements.

        Dr Joe Smith is The Open University’s lead academic for the programme and says: “With climate change projected to hit the poorest people in the developing world worst of all ecological restoration projects are key to ensuring that future generations have security. What is refreshing about this film is that developing world scientists and policy-makers take centre stage in devising responses to environmental problems. The film also shows how ordinary people in China, Rwanda and Ethiopia play a key role in restoring and protecting their environment. It can feel disempowering to look at global issues such as climate change or biodiversity loss; but the breath-taking before and after footage from these projects shows that imaginative research and policy can generate solutions on the ground.”

        Hope in a Changing Climate is produced with support from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), The Open University, The Rockefeller Foundation, the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture and The World Bank. The film will also be made available on The Open University’s new Creative Climate website, www.open.ac.uk/creativeclimate, which documents diverse experiences of climate change across the globe. In addition, EEMP and the George Mason University Center for Climate & Society have organised a network of research centres and nongovernmental organizations around the world to host facilitated stakeholder discussions around the themes of the film.

        Editor’s Notes
        For further information, preview DVDs and images contact Kath Middleditch.

        About John Liu
        John has been studying integrated poverty eradication and large-scale ecosystem rehabilitation since first visiting and filming China’s Loess Plateau in 1995. He has produced, written and directed many ecological films for the BBC, National Geographic and other networks including; A Steppe Ahead; Line in the Sand; Because They’re Worth It; Jane Goodall – China Diary; and The Lessons of the Loess Plateau. He lives and works in Beijing.

        TX details:
        BBC World News will show Hope in a Changing Climate on Friday 27th November at 0430 GMT, 0930 GMT, 1430 GMT (except in the Middle East), 1830 GMT (in the Middle East only), 2130 GMT & 2330 GMT.
        Special Screening at COP15 Climate Change conference

        Hope in hanging Climate is a co-production between The Open University and EEMP for the BBC.The Director is Jeremy Bristow. BBC Commissioning Executive for the Open University is Catherine McCarthy. The Broadcast Learning Executive for The Open University is Janet Sumner. The Open University academics for the series are Joe Smith, James Warren and Vince Gauci

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