We Don't Have Time
29 w
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We Don’t Have Time and @Unilever are proud to present Re:Agriculture I, the first episode in a series of 3 about how the world can feed itself while dealing with multiple challenges from climate change and the loss of precious plant and animal life to ensuring farmers and rural communities have sustainable lives and livelihoods. Watch the full broadcast: https://www.wedonthavetime.org/events/reagriculture-i The focus of this series will be regenerative agriculture as the key to systems change and the delivery mechanism for a food and farming transformation. In this first episode we are going to introduce viewers to what regenerative agriculture is, its role in healing our soils and our lands and its potential to deliver the healthy food the world needs and while helping to meet local and global challenges across countries and continents, North and South. https://youtu.be/iFEnmm56nNs
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27 w
Very beautiful very inspiring https://www.mahjongplay.org/
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27 w
It is very informative and we should apply it
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28 w
Regenerative grazing does way less than just letting the land go back to nature. We're in a crisis. If we stop animal agriculture we can reverse climate change. See the paper by Dr. Sailesh Rao https://climatehealers.org/the-science/animal-agriculture-position-paper/
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28 w
Agreed. While the latter 's prerequisite, then comes our shelter (how we build better, and bigger?) It's still remains to be seen. Also, we may not live-out the production of clothing items? The longer the list, the more septic it is to delay any new invention s or progresses towards low carbon emissions 🙂
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28 w
Food is our life dependent.. Let's go organic way stop cutting tree commercial farmers globally
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29 w
Regenerative agriculture is great but why Unilever? Seems a little weird
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29 w
@ciara_guerrero Why do you have a problem with Unilever. They are recognised as the No. 1 corporate sustainability leader for the tenth year in a row, according to the latest GlobeScan-SustainAbility survey.
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@laura_gate Nestle is on that list along with Walmart, so I'm not sure how credible it is. Unilever may not be "as bad" as some other large corporations but they have tons of ethical and sustainability issues, you can Google it. Palm oil, human rights violations, child labor, even lobbying against the interest of the environment.
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28 w
@ciara_guerrero I heard Unilever talk in June about the way they have helped Iowa soya farmers to transition from intensive ag to regenerative ag to supply the raw materials for Helman's mayonnaise and said I was not aware of this amazing work and maybe we should do a series together. That was the genesis of this. I have also known Unilever for many years as a journalist in the 1990s, and as a UN comms director for 17 years. I do not think among multinationals you will find one as progressive and open to positive change in respect to setting climate targets and other targets that are some of the best in the world. I am sure that they are not perfect, no one is. But I think they are doing some pretty good work and making real efforts to be a leader in sustainability and have inspired many others to get on that journey. check out their science based targets. for example..you can search here https://sciencebasedtargets.org/companies-taking-action#table and their supply chain commitment https://www.edie.net/unilever-outlines-plans-to-halve-supplier-emissions-by-2030/
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29 w
Great collaboration effort
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This session was very informative
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Sounds interesting!
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Waiting for it!
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I am looking forward to this first episode! Regenerative agriculture is a fascinating topic
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Food is a prerequisite for our survival, but what we eat directly affects our climate and our nature, so it will be really exciting to follow Unilever's journey towards "climate-smarter eating".