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Nature

Welcome to our programme

box office: 01497 822 629

The Hay Festival 2013 programme is now on sale to Friends for exclusive booking until midnight on Friday 29 March.

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Nature

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Hay on Earth Forum

Event 1 Venue: Digital Stage

Hay on Earth is the festival’s ongoing sustainability project and is part of our programme of managing and mitigating our environmental impacts, particularly as we stage more festivals around the world. The project has been running for six years. Please join us.
 
Full day ticket allows entry to all 6 sessions: events 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 & 7
This event has taken place

Ben Law talks to Andy Fryers

Green Architecture

Event 2 Venue: Digital Stage

The increasing costs of resources and knowledge about their use and impacts have led to dramatic improvements in sustainable building. The Grand Designs specialist eco-builder in conversation with the Hay on Earth Director.
This event has taken place

Rob Yorke, David Gardner, Caroline Drummond, Poul Christensen

Tough Decisions on Food, Flora and Fauna

Event 3 Venue: Digital Stage

Food security raises serious concerns but this government, aiming to be the greenest ever, proposes to reconnect us with the countryside through nature, not farming. Which sacred cows will be sacrificed in a modernized rural sector? The CEO's of The Royal Agricultural Society and LEAF and the Chair of Natural England talk to rural commentator Rob Yorke.
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Ed Gillespie, Steve Colling and Ackroyd & Harvey

The Art Response - Five images to change the world

Event 4 Venue: Digital Stage

From baby seals to flooding devastation, has the use of dramatic imagery lost its potency to inform the climate change debate? Despite our short attention span, can an incredible image in our increasingly visual world still make an impact?
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Molly Scott Cato and Brian Davey talk to Jane Davidson

Social Justice and Climate Change

Event 5 Venue: Digital Stage

Climate change has the greatest impact on people and places facing poverty. But there are real opportunities to develop policies and practices to narrow the gap.
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Safia Minney, Mariusz Stochaj and Philip Colbert

Fashion Activism

Event 6 Venue: Digital Stage

Fashion is seldom included in debates on sustainability, yet highlighting the sourcing of fabric, design of garments, and working conditions could drive change within the industry, and raising consumer awareness is key. Safia Minney, founder of People Tree, talks to Philip Colbert the designer behind The Rodnik Band and Mariusz Stochaj, who has a long history of sustainable supply chain management in the fashion industry. Chaired by Louise Gray.
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Kim Wilkie

Led by the Land

Event 20 Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage

The radical landscape designer surveys 20 years of his work, from the restoration of the Villa La Pietra in Florence to the strategic masterplan for the World Heritage Site at the Solovetski Archipelago.
This event has taken place

Isabelle Durance

Cardiff Series 2: River Landscapes – Safeguarding Vital Resources

Event 44 Venue: Hay on Earth Stage

Agriculture, industry and climate change are putting intense pressure on the sustainability of our clean water. Where will we fish and swim and skim?
 
This event has taken place

Robert Macfarlane

Cambridge Series 3 - The Old Ways

Event 47 Venue: Big Tent

Macfarlane sets off to follow the ancient tracks, holloways, drovers’ roads and seas paths that form part of a vast network of routes criss-crossing the British landscape and its waters, and connecting them to continents beyond.
 
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Tom Moggach and Myles Bremner talk to Rosie Boycott

The Urban Agriculture Boom

Event 48 Venue: Hay on Earth Stage

What does the rise and rise of apartment windowsills, roof-top allotments, city beehives and tower-block hectares tell us about modern Britain as we struggle to adjust to economic hardship?
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James Marriott, Rob Hopkins, Juliet Davenport, Andrew Simms

nef series 1: Should we leave the oil in the ground?

Event 54 Venue: Hay on Earth Stage

Fossil fuel companies ride high in the stock markets, but is oil more of a liability than an asset? The latest science on CO2 emissions tells us we can’t afford to burn much of what is still underground, meaning the business world starts to look very different. Discover the idea set to shake the City of London and potentially create the single biggest boost to the green economy. Chaired by Andy Fryers.
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Mike Hulme and Rupert Read

Philosophy, Politics and Communication

Event 67 Venue: Digital Stage

What is the best way to communicate the issues around climate change? Emotively? Politically? Scientifically? And what scope is there for making ethical judgments in our response to the evidence?
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Adam Henson

Adam’s farm – My Life on the Land

Event 93 Venue: Llwyfan Cymru – Wales Stage

Meet the Countryfile star.
 
To join the Royal Welsh Show lunch and visit with Adam at Trevithel Court this afternoon, arranged with Sunderlands and Thompsons LLP, please contact John and Helen Price at Llwynberried on 01497 847326 for tickets. Lunch starts at 1.30pm.
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Steve Vaughan

Cardiff Series 3 - Size Matters - Responsible Innovation and New Technologies

Event 106 Venue: Hay on Earth Stage

We can now blur the borders not only of scientific disciplines but also of what might constitute life. Nanotechnology promises better, more effective medicines, and a revolution in materials. But the risks are only partly known and, with our current scientific expertise, only partly knowable. How should we regulate the introduction of nanomaterials to the market?
 
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George Monbiot

Feral: rewilding the land, the sea and human life

Event 547 Venue: Digital Stage

The campaigning journalist and Hay hero gives an exclusive preview of his forthcoming book in which he argues for the mass restoration of damaged ecosystems, the reintroduction of wolves, lynx, beavers, moose and boar to Britain, and a life richer in adventure and surprise.
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Jan Blake with Pete Eckford

The Calabash Children - Storytelling

Event 112 Venue: Starlight Stage

The first show in a week-long residency for the great Storyteller. A childless woman prays to be a mother, a little sister refuses to do as she's told, and a wicked godmother tries to get rid of her goddaughter. Join Jan Blake as she tells tales of stubborn sisters, ungrateful mothers, and beautiful friendships.
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Andrew Simms, Carolyn Steel and Tom Andrews

The Great Transition in Food and Farming

Event 118 Venue: Hay on Earth Stage

This year we’re going to stop waiting and start changing. The Great Transition Campaign, of which the Soil Association is a supporter, is running a series of events leading up to the Earth Summit, asking the question ‘What if?’ Our contribution to this debate: What if our cities produced our food?
 
Supported by The Soil Association
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Sarah Raven

Wild Flowers

Event 124 Venue: Big Tent

The broadcaster, teacher, gardener and cookery writer (Sarah Raven’s Garden Cookbook) has travelled the length and breadth of the British Isles to find 500 of our most breathtakingly beautiful wild flowers.
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Andrew Simms, John Sauven, Peter Myers and Lemn Sissay

nef series 3: Tick Tock, Climate Clock

Event 156 Venue: Digital Stage

How much can society and the economy change in 50 months? On current trends, that’s the time frame we are working to before the balance of risk of dangerous climate change potentially shifts against us. The Chief Executive of Greenpeace UK discusses the deadline with the co-founders of onehundredmonths.org and poet Lemn Sissay.
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Monty Don, Helen Browning, Joanna Blythman and Guests

Health, Beauty and Permanence: What is farming for?

Event 167 Venue: Digital Stage

Is it possible to feed a growing world population without resorting to large-scale, industrialised processes? Does human-scale, decentralised agriculture necessarily mean lower climate change impacts. Is Small always Beautiful? Chaired by Geoffrey Lean
 
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