Turning the heat up on Congress — Activists push diet change to head of climate change
The Hour
Norwalk Connecticut
April 15, 2007
By James Walker — Hour Staff Writer
Norwalk — While scientists with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a dire report on global warming, residents in Norwalk took to the streets Saturday to urge Congress to “Step It Up” by cutting carbon dioxide emissions by the year 2050.
About 30 local people concerned with “the catastrophic effects of climate change” met on the drawbridge near Water and Washington Streets as part of a statewide effort to demand “bold action” be taken.
The event was part of “Step It Up 2007,” a nationwide demonstration and the largest day of action focusing on climate meltdown in America’s history, said Priscilla Feral, the local organizer for the event.
A rally was also scheduled for early Saturday evening in Westport.
“The message today was for Congress to step it up,” Feral said. “It’s Congress we need to set standard and policy.”
The 2007 campaign was expected to cover 50 states and nearly 1,400 events from Maine to Hawaii and from Seattle to Key West.
The local group handed out fliers and distributed educational materials to passersby and motorists from noon to 2 p.m. The demonstrators want an 80% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions during the next 43 years.
Feral, president of Darien-based Friends of Animals, said her organization’s focus was on the grazing of animals, which contributes about 18 percent of all greenhouse gases that drive global warming.
Feral said according to the Worldwatch Institute, 87 percent of agricultural land is devoted to raising animals for human consumption.
Grazing animals consume more food than they yield and emit methane, which is a powerful greenhouse gas associated with landfill and coal mines.
According to the Intergovernmental Panel, global warming is already having an effect on daily life but when the Earth gets a few degrees hotter, the current inconvenience could give way to danger and even death.
The scientists report that Chicago and Los Angeles will likely to face increasing heat waves and severe storm surges could hit New York and Boston.
And cities that rely on melting snow for water may also run into serious shortages.
Feral said to help rectify the situation, people should commit to a plant-based diet and not help fortify an industry.
“If we the people lead, the government will follow,” she said. Adopting a vegan lifestyle can reduce greenhouse gas.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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3 Comments
On April 17, 2007, Boris wrote:
Forcing people into something isn’t a durable solution. Doing so would alienate the final cause itself, and create more hatred towards the ecologist community.
What needs to be done is educating people to the problem, so that they are more receptive to the proposed solution.
I am a devoted ecologist and I consume very little meat myself. But hell, I would have a violent reaction towards anyone trying to take my bacon off my plate!
On April 18, 2007, Jeremy Osborn, Organizer, Step It Up wrote:
Hi Priscilla,
Congrats on a completely successful event! The press coverage looks perfect. It sounds like southern Connecticut really came alive this past weekend. Especially cool that you could use the Step it Up framework of 80% by 2050 and still promote the FoA agenda as well, and that the media proved capable of handling the integrated message.
Great to have worked with you throughout this campaign, and looking forward to more of it in the future!
Take care,
Jeremy
On April 20, 2007, Lee Hall, Friends of Animals wrote:
Norway plans to be the first country in the world to become “carbon neutral” and cut its net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050. The prime minister, Jens Stoltenberg, has proposed the move, expected to encourage other rich countries to act further and faster on climate change.
…Although the proposals were widely welcomed in Norway, critics argued that the country would be doing much more to fight climate change if it stopped producing oil and gas that other countries burn.
More: http://environment.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,,2062357,00.html