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Keywords
Actions and protests
Agriculture
Day
Factory Farming
Farming practices
Food for Life (campaign title)
Greenpeace people
Greenpeace staff
KWCI (GPI)
Lidl
Meat
Meat and Dairy (campaign title)
Outdoors
Props
Small group of people
Supermarkets
Antibiotics in Meat “Pork Chop” Tour Starts in Hamburg
Greenpeace begins its tour through Germany with a three-meter-high pork chop and black-light boxes at a Lidl supermarket in Hamburg. The informative stand offers consumers the opportunity to test their bought meat under black light for residue of antibiotics. The stand also shows information on the negative consequences of the use of antibiotics in factory farming.
Antibiotics residue is deposited in bone-material of the pigs that were treated, which can be still made visible in the cut meat under black light.
Due to an increasing use of antibiotics in factory farming, the number of multi-resistent germs in farms and the environment is also increasing. This results in common antibiotics becoming ineffective.
Discount supermarkets such as Lidl use their low-cost policy to force factory farms to produce low-cost meat at the high cost of animals and the environment.
In original language:
Tour mit Schweinekotelett beginnt in Hamburg
Greenpeace beginnt eine Tour durch Deutschland mit einem drei mal drei Meter großen Kotelett und umfangreichen Informationen ueber die schaedlichen Folgen der Massentierhaltung an einer Filiale der Discount-Kette Lidl in Hamburg.
Rueckstaende von Antibiotika lagern sich in den Knochen von Schweinen ab und werden unter einer Schwarzlichtlampe sichtbar. Verbraucher koennen sich am Greenpeace-Stand selbst davon ueberzeugen.
Weil in der Massentierhaltung zu viele Antibiotika eingesetzt werden, vermehren sich immer mehr multiresistente Keime in den Staellen und in der Umwelt, die gaengige Antibiotika wirkungslos machen.
Containers
Shoot:
Antibiotics in Meat “Pork Chop” Tour Starts in Hamburg
Greenpeace begins a tour through Germany with a three-meter-high pork chop and black-light boxes at a Lidl supermarket in Hamburg. The informative stand offers consumers the opportunity to test their bought meat under black light for residue of antibiotics. The stand also shows information on the negative consequences of the use of antibiotics in factory farming.
Antibiotics residue is deposited in bone-material of the pigs that were treated, which can be still made visible in the cut meat under black light.
Due to an increasing use of antibiotics in factory farming, the number of multi-resistent germs in farms and the environment is also increasing. This results in common antibiotics becoming ineffective.
Discount supermarkets such as Lidl use their low-cost policy to force factory farms to produce low-cost meat at the high cost of animals and the environment.
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier:
GP0STQY43
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
21/07/2017
Locations:
Europe
,
Germany
,
Hamburg
Credit line:
© Bente Stachowske / Greenpeace
Size:
5568px × 3712px 11.81 MB
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)