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Newsletters

Newsletter #23

It is the start of a new month, and almost summer!

Newsletter #22

We have just passed the winter solstice in the Southern Hemisphere (21st June) so we can finally look forward to longer days and shorter nights!

Newsletter #21

The Starfish Story

Newsletter #20

Congrats to India for winning the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011!

Newsletter #19

Being a lifelong vegetarian with a vegetarian child and husband, I started questioning the food pyramid which has been taught to us from the time we started school.

Newsletter #18

I recently received this report from the World Preservation Foundation in the UK and had to pass it onto all the Meat Free Monday-ers!

Newsletter #17

Happy Valentines Day! No surprise for today’s newsletter theme: HEARTS!

Newsletter #16

Thought for the day: there were approximately 6.5 billion people living on earth in 2005 and as the world’s population continues to grow, our requirement for food will also increase.

Newsletter #15

Well, its been a fantastic summer so far and I am sure water has been on your mind at some stage … whether you have spent time swimming, at the sea, cold showers on hot summer’s days or even set your New Years resolution to drink the recommended 8 glasses a day.

Newsletter #14

Happy New Year! For those who have not made their new years resolutions, why not commit to Meat Free Mondays.

Celebs support Meat Free Mondays

Lisa Bloom supports Meat Free Mondays

read more...

Facts & Figures

Compare the Carbon Footprint of a Vegan Burger to a Beef Burger

Did you know that if everyone in the world made a simple switch from a selected meat-based meal to meat analog meal saves a total of over 26 billion tons of CO2-eq
Find the relevant report in the NEWS section below

Based on German research, its been calculated

Based on German research, its been calculated that “A vegan driving an SUV is more ecofriendly than a meat-eater riding a bicycle.” The contribution to global warming is just part of the problem with livestock. The same Dutch study found that livestock occupy 80% of total human land in use. A colossal amount of water is spent maintaining pasture for grazing, which could be far more efficiently used to grow food crops. And according to the FAO report, livestock emissions produce 64% of all human-induced ammonia into the atmosphere, one of the main causes of acid rain, which damages crops, and is almost always blamed on industry and transport.

Having meat free days

Having meat free days or going vegetarian has many health benefits:

REDUCE HEART DISEASE: Recent data from a Harvard University study found that replacing saturated fat-rich foods (eg. meat and full fat dairy) with foods that are rich in polyunsaturated fat (eg. vegetable oils, nuts and seeds) reduces the risk of heart disease by 19%.

FIGHT DIABETES: Research suggests that a higher consumption of red and processed meat increases the risk of type 2 diabetes.

CURB OBESITY: People on low-meat or vegetarian diets have significantly lower body weights and body mass indices. A recent study from Imperial College London also found that reducing overall meat consumption can prevent long-term weight gain.

LIVE LONGER: Red and processed meat consumption is associated with modest increases in total mortality, cancer mortality and cardiovascular disease mortality.

IMPROVE YOUR DIET. Consuming beans or peas results in higher intakes of fibre, protein, zinc, iron and magnesium and lower intakes of saturated fat and total fat.

By going vegetarian or having meat free days

By going vegetarian or having meat free days you will help:

  • Avoid excessive CO2 production,
  • Reduce methane/nitrous oxide production,
  • Save large amounts of water,
  • Avoid polluting our streams/rivers/oceans,
  • Reduce destruction of topsoil & tropical rainforest,
  • Reduce the destruction of wildlife habitats & endangered species,
  • Reduce the use of antibiotics, growth promoters and chemicals
Most of us eat more meat

Most of us eat more meat and other protein rich foods than we need to stay healthy.

In 2007 the World Cancer Research Fund report recommended limiting the consumption of red meats such as beef, pork ad lamb because of a ‘convincing’ link with colorectal cancer. Links have also been found between high meat diets and obesity and heart disease.

Remember also that climate change is a threat to our future health. As the world warms up it is likely that levels of air pollution, and thus allergies and respiratory diseases, will rise, as will the rate of infectious diseases