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News at Brighter Green

Brighter Green & Global Forest Coalition Briefing Paper for International Day for Biodiversity 5/22/13

On the occasion of the International Day for Biodiversity and the start of UN talks on a possible sustainable development goal (SDG) on agriculture Brighter Green and the Global Forest Coalition have published a briefing paper to raise awareness of the negative impacts of rapidly expanding industrial livestock farming and large-scale cattle ranching on the world's forests and biodiversity. Industrial animal agriculture cuts across multiple sectors, affecting land use, water, food security, public health, and climate change. But too often these intersections are overlooked.

Brighter Green at The Seed in NYC 5/19/13

Brighter Green's Executive Director Mia MacDonald spoke about climate change and animal agriculture, and the ecological impacts of the global spread of factory farm operations, at the Seed Experience in New York City on May 18, 2013. She also screened Green's short documentary, "What's for Dinner?" Find out more about the film, including how to show it, here.

Blog Post on the U.S. National Climate Assessment in the Huffington Post and Civil Eats. 5/2/13

Executive Director Mia MacDonald's blog post on the U.S. National Climate Assessment and U.S. and global systems of food production was featured in the Huffington Post and was re-blogged on the American food system news website Civil Eats.

Brighter Green collaborates with Global Forest Coalition at the World Social Forum 3/29/13

Brighter Green collaborated with Global Forest Coalition on an event and paper on the risks of industrial livestock production for the environment, communities (including indigenous communities), and animals at the World Social Forum in Tunisia.

China Dialogue Publishes BG Blogs 2/13/13

Brighter Green guest blogger Wanqing Zhou's exploration of of the growing challenge of food waste in China ("Food Waste and Recycling in China: Too Easy, Too Hard"), including from animal agriculture, has been republished in English and Chinese on China Dialogue, an important, bilingual Web portal for global environmental news with a focus on China.

Katerva Award Winners Announced 2/12/13

The winners of the two Katerva awards for innovation in sustainability have been announced. Mia MacDonald of Brighter Green served on the judging panel for the food security theme, and the project finalist she ranked highest, Backpack Farm, piloted in East Africa, came first in its category.

Brighter Green Hosts a Successful East African Girls' Leadership Initiative Fundraiser 12/7/12

Brighter Green and Tribal Link hosted a successful fundraiser for the East African Girls' Leadership Initiative in December 2012. Over $3,000 were raised to help support two girls' education, living costs, rights training, mentoring, and leadership skill workshops for one year. Singer-songwriter Joy Askew performed at the event and Grace Koutimet, from SIMOO spoke about the role of Maasai women in the community and how educating Maasai women greatly assists the communities' progress.

Mia MacDonald's Blog Post on COP 18 Featured in the Huffington Post 12/6/12

Brighter Green's Mia MacDonald's blog post on COP 18 and the conference's failure to address the negative effects of industrial food systems, particularly industrial agriculture, on climate change appeared in the Huffington Post on December 6, 2012.

Brighter Green Participates in COP 18 Side Event 12/3/12

Brighter Green's Mia MacDonald participated in and moderated a side event to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP18) in Doha, Qatar in December 2012. The side event entitled "Climate Change & Ensuring Sustainable, Humane, Equitable Food Systems: Views from the North and South" focused on climate change and livestock farming. Xie Zheng, featured in Brighter Green's short documentary "What's for Dinner?" also spoke at the event. For more information on Brighter Green's research on climate change and the globalization of farming click here.

Brighter Green attended COP 18 Climate Change Conference in Doha, Qatar 12/2/12

Executive Director Mia MacDonald attended the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 18) from November 26 to December 2, 2012. Mia shared Brighter Green's research on climate change and the globalization of intensive animal agriculture.

Brighter Green Joins Climate Action Network 11/16/12

Brighter Green has just become a member of Climate Action Network-U.S. (USCAN), in the lead up to the COP18 climate summit.

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Guangdong: Pigs, Pollution, and Politics

September 3, 2009 9:37am

Pig farmer Mr. Liang stops to talk with our crew

Three weeks of filming in China and just over three weeks of blogging….The last stop for the “Meat World: China” documentary team is Guangdong province in the far south of the country. It’s here that industry and animal agriculture meet, in often pungent ways. The region, where the Pearl River flows the South China Sea, is one of China’s main manufacturing zones. (It’s also not far from Hong Kong, which has long been a center of financial services.) The Pearl River is also a locus of large-scale pig production. The waterway contains visual and olfactory evidence.

The crew travelled to Guangdong from Ji’an by road (Jian Yi, with the equipment, by car) and the rest of the crew by rail (a 10-hour journey). Here’s director Jian Yi on the crew’s first day in Guangdong. “We visited Mr. and Mrs. Chen, who own a factory that produces sweaters for export, and had interesting conversations. Mrs. Chen, however we tried, simply refused to believe that the meat industry had any impact on climate change.”

Guangdong Province
Guangdong Province
Her response was somewhat unexpected – “surprising and interesting,” Jian Yi says – since she’d expressed concern about the environment and knew about deforestation and global warming. “She was very stubborn…she just wouldn’t believe it.” And like most people interviewed in Jiangxi and throughout Guangdong during the course of the filming, “she believes that pig manure is good fertilizer and is very well dealt with.”

In 2008, the government, concerned by manure pollution in the Pearl River, decided that no more pig farms could be established in the delta—although such facilities will be allowed (and encouraged, in some cases) in other parts of Guangdong. This builds on a 2003 ban on pig factory farms along the river in Dongguang City—an event raised by a spry old farmer the team encountered next, in the city of Huizhou. It’s a region of Guangdong where small-scale pig farms are still common.

Left, Director Jian Yi on the phone by a polluted tributary; the smell was strong, Dusk and then night falls over Pearl River, polluted by industrial and animal waste
Left: Director Jian Yi on the phone by a polluted tributary; the smell was strong.  Right: Dusk and then night falls over Pearl River, polluted by industrial and animal waste
“We bumped into an elderly gentleman who owns the largest farm (with 500 pigs) [in Huizhou],” Jian Yi reports. Riding a motorbike, Mr. Liang stopped on the roadside and was keen to chat. He related that larger factory farms had moved to Huizhou, from Dongguan City, where they can’t operate any longer, and now threaten his small, family-run business. He fears he won’t be able to compete. But like Mrs. Chen, he wasn’t concerned about the effects of pig waste, or the quantity of it produced. “Like his peers, he also owns fish ponds, into which he throws all the pig manure to feed fish and ducks at the same time,” Jian Yi writes. He and other farmers even sell the excess pig manure to people with fish ponds.

Pollution does, though, remain a political issue. “We also got a chance to film a little river polluted by both industrial waste and farm waste,” Jian Yi continues. Some of the local villagers agreed to talk to the crew about their anger and concern. “Most, however, hid away from our camera,” fearful of government officials’ reactions if they saw the footage. Previously, some have experienced “bad lessons” (retaliation) when they’ve answered interviewers’ questions. No officials have seen the footage, nor did any interfere with the crew’s work.

As the shoot nears its end, an animated dinner takes place with the crew hotly, loudly and unexpectedly, debating two final interviewees, and each other, about the ethical and ecological complexities unearthed by the filming. To capture it, the camera was, for a few minutes, turned in the opposite direction. That story and a few more from the shoot in Guangdong, coming up next.