Catholic Concern for Animals
Philip Lymbery in conversation with CCA Chief Executive, Chris Fegan and Dr Gerald Taylor.
Philip speaking at The Food Impact Conference in Istanbul, Turkey
Food Technologies: Eating without consuming the world
Italy’s ‘land without animals’ reveals something sinister behind its famously passionate relationship with food
I’ll never forget my summer road trip through the land of gastronomy. I spent several days touring Italy’s most fertile agricultural valley.
Philip Lymbery: “Ci restano solo sessanta raccolti. Investiamo nell’’agricoltura rigenerativa”
Intervista con il direttore di Compassion in World Farming: “Ogni anno circa l’1% del territorio globale si deteriora”
Time’s up: reaching ‘peak meat’ and shifting to plant-based is no longer an option, but a need
For many years, I consciously chose veggie dishes from restaurant menus and avoided buying cheap supermarket meat. I ate ‘minimal meat’ for environmental reasons. But it was only when I spent a stomach-wrenching four hours observing a porpoise post-mortem that
“Only sixty harvests remain” today. The presentation in Bologna
14 Aprile ore 18 la Feltrinelli Bologna Via Ravegnana 1 Philip Lymbery presenta Restano solo sessanta raccolti interviene la giornalista e autrice Sabrina Giannini Venerdì
SOS earth, fertile soil is running out
“Restano solo sessanta raccolti” rilancia un allarme dell’Onu: l’agricoltura iper-intensiva dilava e insterilisce i suoli, causando anche un aumento della CO2 in atmosfera, e intervenire con più chimica e più tecnologia non risolve il problema
Events in Bologna: All the shows, music, art, culture and theater in the city and in the region
L’autore di “Farmageddon” presenta “Restano solo sessanta raccolti”, nuova e documentata ricerca che dimostra come l’agricoltura e l’allevamento industriale stiano mettendo a repentaglio l’aria che respiriamo, l’acqua che beviamo, il cibo che mangiamo, indicando le vie alternative attraverso cui costruire
PERFECT STORM: WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM SUPERMARKET FOOD SHORTAGES?
Shopping these days can feel like a bit of a lottery. Wandering into the local supermarket can have me wondering which of my favourite foods is going to be out of stock today.