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Episode 120: Hydrofracking Perspectives

Episode 120: Hydrofracking Perspectives

FromThe Farm Report


Episode 120: Hydrofracking Perspectives

FromThe Farm Report

ratings:
Length:
50 minutes
Released:
Apr 19, 2012
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This week on The Farm Report, Erin Fairbanks is joined by wealth of guests to discuss the issue of hydraulic fracturing, better known as hydrofracking. Erin talks with Heather Carlucci-Rodriguez and Alissa Westervelt of Chefs for the Marcellus, a group of New York City chefs and food purveyors raising awareness about the harmful health effects of fracking. Joining via the phone lines is Greg Swartz of Willow Wisp Farm, talking about how hydrofracking circumvents the Clean Water Act via exceptions granted by the Bush-Cheney administration. Also calling in is Luce Guanzini of Highwood Farm. She discusses the No Surface Rights lease that prevents gas companies from entering private properties. How do these technologies impact our food systems? This episode has been brought to by Hearst Ranch. It [fracking] directly impacts our watershed. You cant do anything without water, namely grow food. It doesnt relegate itself to farm-to-table...but it really affects everything - industrial food and fast food. --Heather Carlucci-Rodriguez on The Farm Report If hydrofracking safe, why do they need an exemption from basic environmental legislation? --Greg Swartz on The Farm Report
Released:
Apr 19, 2012
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The Farm Report is a show about the people, processes, and policies that shape how food is produced today. From the latest agricultural innovations to the day-to-day challenges of running a viable business growing vegetables and grazing cattle, host Lisa Elaine Held engages in conversations with farmers and farmworkers and the people who work alongside them—like chefs, researchers, activists, and investors. Expect from-the-field insights paired with real-world context as guests explore how producing fresh, delicious food relates to environmental and community sustainability, equality and justice, politics and policy, and better health.