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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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Corporate Control Over Chinese Soy

January 8, 2010 2:11pm

Soy originates from China, which is now a net-importer of the bean.

Henry Kissinger said, "Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control the people."

I was reading the other day that China is importing a large amount of soybeans from the U.S. and Brazil, to use as animal feed to meet its growing demand for meat. Kissinger’s words ring true when it comes to China's current relationship with soy - a relationship that reminds me of an ancient Chinese story, the classic Strategies of the Warring States.

During the Spring and Autumn Period in ancient China, there was a powerful state named Qi, with two neighboring states named Lu and Liang. The king of Qi first issued an order that his subjects must wear clothes made of silk. He also ordered that his state could only grow grains, no mulberry trees whose leaves are used to feed silkworms. The demand for silk thus soared in Qi. Seeing this, Lu and Liang stopped their grain production and shifted to plant mulberry trees so as to produce silk for profit. Years later, however, the king of Qi changed his order. He ruled that his subjects could only wear cotton clothes and forbade his state from selling food to the neighboring states Lu and Liang. Having abandoned the original agricultural production, Lu and Liang collapsed because of famine and civil disorder. Qi thus easily conquered the two states.

The ancient wisdom takes a different form but shares the same essence as the modern “battle within the world food system”. Facilitated by technology, intensive practices and subsidies, today's use of food as a weapon can be seen most clearly through food aid, which usually destroys traditional agricultural practices and re-orients production towards exportation. Free-trade policies only worsen the situation, as local agricultural production is unable to compete with cheap imports.

China is known to be the origin of the soybean. Before 1995, China was self-sufficient in soybean production and also a net exporter of soybean. However, after 1995 and especially after 2001, China’s domestic soybean production shrank and its imports skyrocketed. Today, China has completed its transformation from major producer and net exporter of soybean to the world’s largest importer of soybean. Coincidentally, 1995 was the birth of the World Trade Organization and 2001, the year that China became an official member of the WTO and began to experience free trade restrictions on its agricultural products.

China's 2004 soybean crisis further hastened its transformation to a net soybean importer. China lacks an independent national information system for soybean market speculations. So, decisions are made solely based on the Chicago Board of Trade's figures (CBOT). The end of 2003 and early 2004 marked a sharp turnover of soybean futures price from 2,300 yuan/ton (equivalent to about 330 USD/ton) to 4,400 yuan/ton (equivalent to about 630 USD/ton) as the USDA predicted reduced yield because of bad weather.

As a result, Chinese companies purchased over 8 million tons of soybean in early 2004 from the U.S., for fear of further hikes in soybean prices. However, one month after the purchase, the soybean price plunged to less than half of 4,400 yuan/ton (equivalent to less than 315 USD/ton). News coverage in China from that time reported that the U.S. government and the soybean industries manipulated the soybean price and thus created the whole crisis. This event led many soybean processing companies to declare bankruptcy.

The crisis, however, turned out to be a great opportunity for U.S. corporations. The Chinese soybean market is now dominated by four players: Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Bunge, Cargill and Louis Dreyfus. During the 2004 soybean crisis, these four companies bought the bankrupt processing companies at low prices and now hold all the decision-making power in regards to the purchase of soybean.

So now the scene on the ground is: domestic non-GM soybean producers are hoarding their soy, whose lower oil content makes it less valuable to oil processing companies, processors in the Northeast are either declaring bankruptcy or moving to the coastal East to cut back on transportation costs, and processors in the coastal East are importing vast quantities of GM soybean mainly from the U.S. and Brazil. It’s estimated that in 2008, foreign companies or joint ventures funded 70% of China's oil processing factories, and multinational corporations controlled 80% of the country's soybean processing capacity.