One Man, One Cow, One Planet

Movies & Music:

One Man, One Cow, One Planet

One Man, One Cow, One Planet
Starring: Peter Proctor
Directed By: Thomas Burstyn
Produced By: Barbara Sumner-Burstyn
Genre: Documentary
Studio: Cloud South Films
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Awards:

Best non-broadcast film - Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival
Official Selection - Wild & Scenic Environmental Film Festival

Plot Outline:

A celebration of the work of peter Proctor in India and the amazing success of marginal farmers across India: as they save their soils, their communities and their lives with organic and biodynamic farming.

A celebration of the amazing success of marginal farmers across India: as they save their soils, their communities and their lives with organic and biodynamic.

One Man, One Cow, One Planet available direct from the film makers at www.onemanonecow.com

 

About the Film

What does an environmentally friendly biodynamic food system capable of feeding everyone actually look like?

This film is a blueprint for a post-industrial future. It takes you into the heart of the world's most important renaissance. The outcome of the battle for agricultural control in India may just dictate the future of the earth. Our existence on this planet is precarious.

Modern industrial agriculture is destroying the earth:
Desertification, water scarcity, toxic cocktails of agricultural chemicals pervading our food chains, ocean ecosystem collapse, soil erosion and massive loss of soil fertility.

Our ecosystems ore overwhelmed. Humanity's increasing demands are exceeding the Earth's carrying capacity.

A simple recipe to save the world? One old man and a bucket of cow-dung. Are you crazy?

Why YOU should see this film

Modern agriculture causes topsoil to be eroded at 3 million tons per hour. (that’s 26 billion tons a year) Human mass is replacing biomass and other species. The carrying capacity of the earth is almost spent. To maintain our comfort zone lifestyles we will soon need five earths to sustain us in the style to which we have become accustomed.

The mantra of free trade has failed the world’s poor. There is a better way.

Biodynamic agriculture may be the only answer we have left.

 

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