lela
Registered
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2010
- Messages
- 90
- Likes
- 29
A hidden chain of destruction stretches from the factory farms in Europe to the forests of South America - where huge soy plantations, grown to feed chickens, cows and pigs in Europe, are wiping out wildlife and making climate change worse.
To make way for soy plantations, thousands of people are being forced from their land. Indigenous people are being evicted and forests are being cleared.
This ground breaking film investigates the impacts of growing soy in South America and shows how small scale farming that is good for people and the environment is losing out to big business of pesticides – poisoning rural communities, water sources and nature.
Few people realise that a hidden chain of destruction stretches from factory farms in Europe to the forests of South America – where huge soy plantations are wiping out wildlife and making climate change worse. Soy, grown to feed chickens, cows and pigs in Europe, now covers over 11 million hectares in South America – an area equivalent to all the arable farmland in Germany – and demand is growing fast.
"Here we had water, streams, crops, big trees. Now everything is destroyed. I think we, the Kaiowa indigenous people are going to die, our race is going to end here".
Getulio De Oliveira, Leader of the Guarani Kaiowa people, Brazil
Video Link:
http://feedingfactoryfarms.org/
To make way for soy plantations, thousands of people are being forced from their land. Indigenous people are being evicted and forests are being cleared.
This ground breaking film investigates the impacts of growing soy in South America and shows how small scale farming that is good for people and the environment is losing out to big business of pesticides – poisoning rural communities, water sources and nature.
Few people realise that a hidden chain of destruction stretches from factory farms in Europe to the forests of South America – where huge soy plantations are wiping out wildlife and making climate change worse. Soy, grown to feed chickens, cows and pigs in Europe, now covers over 11 million hectares in South America – an area equivalent to all the arable farmland in Germany – and demand is growing fast.
"Here we had water, streams, crops, big trees. Now everything is destroyed. I think we, the Kaiowa indigenous people are going to die, our race is going to end here".
Getulio De Oliveira, Leader of the Guarani Kaiowa people, Brazil
Video Link:
http://feedingfactoryfarms.org/