Pew Environment Group to premiere film, host lunch panel on destructive environmental impacts of poorly managed salmon farms on Thursday, November 12th
For Immediate Release
November 9, 2009
On Thursday, November 12 at 11 a.m. at Landmark’s E Street Cinema, Pew – as a member of the Pure Salmon Campaign coalition – will host a press lunch briefing and premiere a documentary that shows the major environmental threats posed by fish farming. Speakers will discuss current problems affecting the global farmed salmon industry and will identify the potential dangers and impacts of unregulated open ocean aquaculture in U.S. federal waters. The film, "Farmed Salmon Exposed," runs approximately 20 minutes. This event is part of the Pure Salmon Campaign's fourth annual Global Week of Action.
Watch the 3 min intro to the film:
WHO:
Gerald Leape – senior officer, Pew Environment Group (moderator)
Barton Seaver – chef/Blue Ocean Institute Fellow
Marianne Cufone – fish campaign director, Food and Water Watch
Enrique Yuri – former subcontract employee of the Chilean farmed salmon industry
David Guggenheim – president, 1planet1ocean, a project of the Ocean Foundation
WHAT:
Press lunch briefing and film premiere to show the global reach of Norwegian salmon farming industry and provide a cautionary tale as the U.S. opens its federal waters to fish farms
WHEN:
Thursday, November 12 at 11 a.m. EST
WHERE:
Landmark E Street Cinema
555 11th Street, NW, Washington, DC
(Entrance is on E Street, NW, between 10th and 11th Streets; closest metro stations are Gallery Place and Metro Center)
The Pew Environment Group is the conservation arm of The Pew Charitable Trusts, a non-governmental organization headquartered in the United States that applies a rigorous, analytical approach to improving public policy, informing the public and stimulating civic life. To learn more, go to www.pewenvironment.org.
To learn more about the Pure Salmon Campaign and the Global Week of Action, go to www.farmedsalmonexposed.org.