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News at Brighter Green

Presentation from Africa Animal Welfare Action Conference Available 9/7/10

Mia MacDonld's presentation from the AAWA conference underway in Nairobi is available now, covering Ethiopia's livestock sector, developments in nature's rights and animal rights, and strategies for action.

Brighter Green Video on Ethiopia's Complex Relationship with Livestock Now Available 8/31/10

Narrated by former Brighter Green intern Whitney Hoot, this video is part of Brighter Green's Food Policy and Equity Program, outlining the social, environmental, and animal welfare consequences of intensifying meat production and rising domestic and export consumption on Ethiopia, home of Africa's largest livestock herd.

Brighter Green Video on Brazil's Soy and Meat Economies Now Available 8/31/10

Brighter Green's program on Food Policy and Equity continues to grow, with a video on the expansion of Brazil's livestock sector now available. The video, narrated by Simone de Lima, professor of psychology at the University of Brasilia and founder of Brazilian animal rights organization Pro-Anima, explores the profound environmental consequences of Brazil's booming livestock and soy industries.

Brighter Green Video on China's Meat Consumption Now Available 7/12/10

As part of Brighter Green's Food Policy and Equity Program, a short video detailing China's rising consumption of animal products is now available. The video is narrated by Brighter Green Associate Stella Zhou, who is blogging from China this summer. More to come soon as we explore further the impacts of the globalization of industrial animal agriculture in China, India, Brazil, and Ethiopia.

Huffington Post Blog Generates Discussion on the Web 6/2/10

Last month, Mia MacDonald posted a blog on the Huffington Post, covering Goldman Sach's involvement with factory farming in China. Her piece, "Investment Bankers with Wings: Making a Killing," earned several notable mentions online, from sources such as the PETA Files, Discovery's Planet Green, and Current TV.

Brighter Green in the Huffington Post 5/4/10

Mia MacDonald posted a blog on Goldman Sachs's investment in factory farming in China on the Huffington Post. Read it here. Feel free to add your comments or share with others or link to it.

Mia MacDonald's Presentation from Pace Law School Now Available 4/21/10

Brighter Green Executive Director Mia MacDonald recently discussed the environmental impacts of factory farming at a Pace Law School Panel, organized by the Student Animal Legal Defense Fund and the Environmental Law Society. Click here for the PDF of this presentation.

Hot off the Press: Diet for a Hot Planet 4/14/10

Brighter Green colleague Anna Lappé's new book is out. Diet for a Hot Planet addresses the climate impact of our food choices, and what we can do to make a difference. Thanks, Anna, for mentioning Brighter Green's work in helping to shape a more just and sustainable food system for New York City!

Article by Mia MacDonald Featured in Resurgence Magazine 3/9/10

The March issue of Resurgence Magazine, themed "The Future of Food," has published an article by Brighter Green Executive Director Mia MacDonald. Click here for a PDF version of the article, "Eat Like it Matters."

Congratulations to Karin Chien! 3/8/10

Karin Chien, founder of dGenerate Films and Co-Executive Producer with Brighter Green of "What's for Dinner?", has won the Piaget Producers Prize at the Independent Spirit Awards. Karin won the award for her work on The Exploding Girl, and Santa Mesa.

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Did Smoke Get in Their Eyes?

December 19, 2009 3:02pm
Filed under:

Climate clearing or combusting?

After an all-night session that stretched into the gray Copenhagen afternoon, COP 15, the climate summit, is over. A 12-paragraph agreement has been "noted," and government delegates, NGO representatives (who'd largely been shut out of the negotiations at the Bella Center in recent days), journalists and assorted others were packing, bleary-eyed, and making moves to leave the city. Few expected the two weeks of intense deliberations to end like this. I'd had several late nights this week, attending panels at the people's climate summit, the Klimaforum, and ruminating with colleagues about the prospects of a climate deal. Last night, as the deliberations stretched on, three of us followed the news on TV until just after President Obama gave his news conference around 11 p.m. He finished and initially we were silent. What had happened? What did it mean? Then the deflation set in; had all led up to this...just this, what Obama called a "first step?" The science of climate change, he admitted, warranted more action, but the political process simply couldn't provide it.

This morning, puzzling over it all along the Copenhagen waterfront, I realized that this lovely, prosperous and very expensive city (a reality felt keenly by NGO delegates from the global South) is bounded by two sets of active smokestacks. They're ugly, visceral evidence of industrial society, spewing pollution into the sky non-stop. I couldn't help but wonder, in the frantic final days at the Bella Centre, had smoke gotten into the heads of states eyes, clouding their judgement? It's something I'll be pondering for weeks, if not months, to come. Despite the lack of a binding climate deal, the UN has declared 2010 International Year of Biodiversity. Perhaps it's apt here to quote President Obama seeking out Chinese premier Wen Jiabao yesterday: "Are you ready?"