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Posted: 2017-10-21T17:50:44Z | Updated: 2017-10-21T17:50:44Z

Donuts, deodorant, buns and burgers.

Theyre killing us and not just because of what they do to our bodies.

No, the real problem is what the beef , soy , and palm oil that theyre made of as well as the pulp & paper theyre packaged in do to our forests and, by extension, our climate.

Specifically, these are the big four commodities responsible for most of the worlds deforestation, and the Union of Concerned Scientists points out that four Latin American countries alone destroy at least 2.71 million hectares of forest each year just to make way for cattle. Thats more than 10,000 square miles of forest, which is almost 10-times the devastation wrought by this years California wildfires.

It hurts us all, because as forests die, they release massive amounts of methane and carbon dioxide, accelerating climate change.

The good news is that we can purge deforestation from these four supply chains by 2020 or just over two years from now by simply scaling up ten time-tested activities that producers, NGOs, and governments are already practicing around the world.

Thats the consensus of more than 250 economists, ecologists, and agronomists, distilled into a very readable document called Commodities and Forests Agenda 2020: Ten priorities to remove tropical deforestation from commodity supply chains .

The 30-page report (plus 14-page index) was published at New York Climate Week in September by Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 (TFA 2020), which represents more than 100 entities from environmental NGOs and governments to multinational corporations and indigenous organizations.

The report is also the focus of episodes 22 and 23 of the Bionic Planet podcast , which offers a brief history of TFA 2020 and provides examples of some activities in action.

You can subscribe to Bionic Planet on iTunes , TuneIn , Stitcher , or wherever you access podcasts, or you can listen to the most recent episode here:

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They're killing us -- and not just because of what they do to our bodies.\r\n\r\n No, it's because of what the soy, beef, and palm-oil that they're made of -- and they paper they're packaged in -- do to the environment.\r\n\r\n More specifically, it's because of the way way we get these commodities -- by chopping or degrading forests -- which is one reason that tropical forests now emit more greenhouse gasses than they absorb, according to a study published last month in the journal Science.\r\n\r\n But what if I told you we could end this by 2020 -- just two years from now?\r\n\r\n I'm not saying we can end all deforestation by 2020, but what if I told you we can purge deforestation from these four commodities -- the ones that drive most of the world's deforestation -- by ramping up ten activities that we're already engaged in -- and have been for decades: that these activities are time-tested, and they're lined up like dominoes, ready to be activated? It's like a giant, simmering pot ready to boil.\r\n\r\n Would you believe me?\r\n\r\n I hope so, because that's exactly what I'm saying, and it's not just me saying this. It's more than 250 economists, ecologists, and agronomists from around the world, and they're drawing on the experience of environmental NGOand small farming communities from Africa to Asia to Latin America -- as well as the big agribusinesses -- who are, quite frankly, the critical actors in all of this.\r\n\r\n Today we're looking at these ten activities, how they fit into 100 more that are getting a lot of attention these days -- as well as where they came from, why they work, and how you can learn more about them.\r\n\r\n  \r\n\r\n NARRATOR\r\n\r\n Earth. We broke it. We own it -- and nothing is as it was. Not the trees, not the seas - not the forests, farms, or fields -- and not the global economy that depends on all of these.\r\n\r\n But we can restore it. Make it better: greener, more resilient, more sustainable.\r\n\r\n But how? Technology? Geoengineering? Are we doomed to live on a... Bionic Planet? Or is Nature itself the answer?\r\n\r\n That's the question we address in every episode of Bionic Planet, a podcast of the Anthropocene -- the new epoch defined by man's impact on earth -- and nowhere is that impact more deeply felt than in the forests, farms, and fields that recycle our air and provide our food.\r\n\r\n Today we're looking at lists: two of them, to be specific. One involves 100 solutions that can not only slow climate change, but end it and even reverse it. The other involves ten activities that can accelerate a cluster of the big 100. In between our examination of these two lists, you're going to have to sit through a little history class -- because you won't understand where we're at or where we're going if you don't understand where we came from and how we got here.\r\n\r\n Act I\r\n\r\n NARRATOR\r\n\r\n I'm opening today's show with a book review of sorts -- a very short one like the ones that Sister Mary Ann used to ask us to deliver in her English class at Christ the King school in Chicago. It compares and contrasts two best-sellers related to Climate Change. One is called \"Drawdown\", and it's a recipe book of sorts... for saving the planet. I love this book. The other is called \"This Changes Everything\", and it's a mess. I hate it -- even though it's more entertaining than the first.\r\n\r\n What I love about Drawdown, which is edited by environmentalist and entrepreneur Paul Hawken, is that it focuses on concrete, doable ways of fixing the mess.\r\n\r\n Specifically, it summarizes 100 solutions that can not only slow climate change, but -- cumulatively -- end it and even reverse it. Of these 100, 80 already exist and are even being implemented, while 20 are listed as \"coming attractions\".\r\n\r\n He categorizes about a quarter of the solutions under either \"food\" or \"land use\", and they include things like green agriculture, forest protection, and indigenous peoples' land management -- all of which I cover in this podcast\r\n\r\n What I hate about \"This Changes Everything\" is that it's shrill, sloppy, and dismissive of workable solutions. Its basic story arc is this: \"Gee, I just realized this climate stuff is serious, and so I spent a year or so investigating it, and I found that all of the so-called solutions out there only fix part of the problem... none of the fix the whole thing. We need something radical! A total reset of human nature! And I'm just the person to tell you how to do it, and it involves the post office.\"\r\n\r\n On the one hand, in writing the book, Naomi Klein sounded the alarm, which is great, and she even pointed out that we need to radically alter the way we run our economy... which is true... but then she dismisses anything that isn't a magic bullet like the ones that kills vampires... or is it warewolves? 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