 
            Gabriela Cowperthwaite ā93 screened her new documentary āThe Grabā at the 2022 Toronto Film Festival (TIFF) this month.
This article was written for and originally published in The Occidental, the independent student-run newspaper at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė. and more coverage online at .
By Karina Smith
follows journalist Nathan Halverson and his team at the Center for Investigative Reporting. Halverson discovers that a Chinese companyās of one of the worldās largest pork producers, Smithfield Foods, allowed China to take ownership of one in four American pigs.
According to Cowperthwaite, as climate change creates a global depletion of food and water resources, governments are āgrabbing,ā or monopolizing, fertile land and water resources.
ā[āThe Grabā] is an investigative thriller that aims to explain the world, to expose businesses and to unearth the powerful entities that are grabbing up food and water from beneath us while we look the other way,ā Cowperthwaite said.
Cowperthwaite said the investigative team used 20,000 private emails from powerful corporations and governments to expose the details of these land grabs. They collected from private landowners and farmers who have experienced land or water seizures.
Cowperthwaite said that while people ignore climate change or continue to debate its existence, the reality is that wealthy corporations and international governments are taking control of the diminishing available resources that are left.
āWhen we donāt act, we donāt hold power accountable, and we donāt pay attention to the ramifications of whatās happening as a result of climate change,ā Cowperthwaite said.
āThe Grabā tells the story of farmers in Arizona who woke up to find their water wells empty, Cowperthwaite said. In La Paz, Arizona, landowners on the amount of water they can pump from aquifers; so to grow alfalfa that is shipped overseas.
According to Cowperthwaite, as global temperatures begin to rise, countries including to ensure they will have enough water to be able to feed their populations.
āWe know [of] OPEC, a group of countries that controlled oil and the world,ā Cowperthwaite said. āWe are now looking at āfood-peck,ā which is of a small group of powerful entities, countries, controlling all the food.ā
Cowperthwaite said āThe Grabā poses questions about how the United States is reacting to the looming threat of food and water shortages.
āThe United States has no national water strategy,ā Cowperthwaite said. āShould the U.S. have one? What would that look like? Should the U.S. view water as a national security issue?ā
Halverson said the film talks about how the world is meals away from chaos.
āThree days of essentially not eating or not having adequate food, and people will take to the streets and begin to topple governments,ā Halverson said.
Cowperthwaite also said it was surreal when her investigative team was deported after entering an airport in Zambia.
āIt was so disheartening because we had so many plans to be able to talk to the people and hear the story from those who were experiencing it in real-time,ā Cowperthwaite said. āMedia was literally kept out of the country because they knew we were going to be reporting on food and water.ā
The documentary captures this moment through the crewās phone cameras, and Cowperthwaite said the scene highlights how far governments are going to conceal and suppress civilian uprisings.
āWhen these hungry people rise up or pissed-off people rise up, there are military mechanisms to tamp down any aggression and any uprisings,ā Cowperthwaite said.
Halverson said the documentary brings attention to one of the greatest challenges of our time ā feeding the global population.
Jonathan Ingalls, the director of photography for āThe Grab,ā said that the film aims to also provide solutions for these issues.
āThe film is setting up the problem, but then also presenting a budget, a series of solutions,ā Ingalls said. āWe could actually prevent, and also make huge improvements in terms of making sure people have food and water security in the years to come.ā
Ingalls has worked alongside Cowperthwaite for 20 years and said he trusts putting his work in her hands as a storyteller.
ā[Cowperthwaite] is really trying to make things better in the world, and sheās really good at using the medium of film to do it,ā Ingalls said. āIām happy to be a part of that.ā
According to Halverson and Ingalls, the story has changed how they think about and interact with food systems. Both said they have begun consuming less meat in their diets. Cowperthwaite said to focus on not taxing systems that cannot provide for you.
According to Cowperthwaite, āThe Grabā received a standing ovation at TIFF and thoughtful questions from the audience.
Halverson said a Zambian activist after the premiere said that āThe Grabā will push people to do more and think differently about the problems presented in the documentary.
āThis film is a love letter to investigate reporting,ā Cowperthwaite said.
 
       
       
      