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News at Brighter Green

China Dialogue Quotes Brighter Green 6/7/13

A very good analysis in China Dialogue on Shuanghui's purchase of Smithfield, the world's largest pork producer quotes executive director and Brighter Green guest blogger Wanqing Zhou, a Worldwatch Institute researcher and Beijing native.

Brighter Green/GFC Research Shared at Bonn Climate Conference 6/7/13

The briefing paper on industrial livestock production and deforestation, published in English and Spanish by Brighter Green and the Global Forest Coalition (GFC), is being disseminated at the UN climate change conference now underway in Bonn, Germany. Thanks to GFC executive director Simone Lovera, who's participating in the talks and who spoke about this research during a side event (formal panel) at the conference.

Brighter Green May 2013 Newsletter Published 5/30/13

Brighter Green's May 2013 Newsletter is here. See what we have been working on in our three program areas: Food Policy and Equity, Sustainability and Community, and Climate Change, Livelihoods and Rights, and some upcoming projects.

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.

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Mr. and Mrs. Yu's Famous Vegan Diner

August 10, 2009 2:59pm
Wheatgrass in the Vegan Hut

Mr. Yu tends to his wheatgrass

The "Meat World: China" film team's last stop in Beijing was a visit to Beijing’s Vegan Hut, China’s first vegan restaurant where, we could see in the dailies (clips of the team’s footage, compressed and uploaded in China, and downloaded in New York), a healthy crop of wheatgrass and a number of customers. Jian Yi interviewed the owners, Mr. and Mrs. Yu, who opened the place after reading about the role of the meat industry in climate change in a 2006 United Nations report. Vegan Hut has become a gathering place for people in Beijing concerned about meat, global warming, and the environment writ large—“keen vegetarians” as Jian Yi described them. It was a lively evening. There was a showing of Meat the Truth, a Dutch documentary about the role of livestock in global warming (the English subtitled into Chinese). It riffs on U.S. Vice President Al Gore’s seminal climate doc, “An Inconvenient Truth,” specifically its lack of any mention of meat eating and global warming.

After the film, a small group of Vegan Hut patrons discussed the issues the film raised, and its approach, intensely. Among them: a government official who’s been a vegetarian for 20 years, and who is, Jian Yi writes, “very concerned with factory farming and public health.” He’s about to publish a book with the title, roughly translated into English, of Breaking People’s Myths About Meat. Some questioned the role of Western influence on the rise in China’s meat and dairy consumption; others begged to differ. The debate went on for quite some time.
A sample of Vegan Hut's delicacies
Mr. Yu and Jian Yi enjoy the vegan fanfare

Next time you’re in Beijing, you’ll have to eat at Vegan Hut, Jian Yi tells me and Brighter Green’s producing partners, Karin Chien of dGenerate Films and Susannah Ludwig of Flourish Films, who are also on the skype call. We readily agree. (The last time I was in Beijing, more than a decade ago, the one vegetarian restaurant my colleague and I tried to visit was closed. One dish I do recall eating in a non-descript conference center hotel was something like iceberg lettuce with brown sauce. It was not, needless to say, a meal memorable for its taste.)

There’s something else, Jian Yi says—something unexpected: the experience the shoot is having on the crew. They’re moving in a more vegetarian direction. “I think, “ he says, “I have become a vegan. So has Song [the sound editor].”

Next up: Jian Yi and his team head south, to Jiangxi province, to document a day in the life of a factory farm entrepreneur, the realities of smaller pig farms, the recollections of an older generation of Chinese farmers of the food cultures they grew up with, and to record lunch time at Donald Macky, a home-grown Chinese fast food outlet.