The screening was attended by the director, European filmmaker Denis Delestrac. Cement workers raise awareness in the construction sector during the 5th Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival
Santo Domingo – This Thursday, September 10, together with representatives from the construction, mining, and cement production industries, the Dominican Association of Portland Cement Producers (ADOCEM) sponsored a screening of the film Sand Wars and a discussion panel as part of the 5th Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF).
The event, held in the auditorium of the New Horizons Bilinguial School (which also supported the screening), was accompanied by the film’s director and screenwriter, renowned European filmmaker Denis Delestrac, dubbed “the French Michael Moore” by the U.S. press, and one of the most esteemed and influential documentary directors of the decade.
Julissa Báez, executive director of ADOCEM, gave the opening address and moderated the discussion panel. The screening was sponsored as part of the organization’s activities to raise environmental awareness on sustainability in the cement and construction industries as well as the appropriate use of the country’s natural resources, according to ADOCEM.
Báez introduced Sand Wars as a French-Canadian documentary on the market for sand, a raw material that has awakened a similar appetite, at the global level, as those for oil and gas. “The documentary warns of the economic, geopolitical, and environmental consequences of the boom in demand [for sand] and its improper extraction,” Baéz told the audience.
“This is why we at ADOCEM are raising the warning flag, via the message in this film, to motivate members of the construction sector to reflect on the need to use our resources responsibly,” Baéz added in a press release.
The panel included José Sena, engineer and president of the Chamber of Oil and Mining of the Dominican Republic; Susy Gatón, vice president of the Association of Homebuilders and Promoters (ACOPROVI); and the film’s director, Denis Delestrac.
During the discussion, before taking questions from the audience, the panelists offered diverse perspectives on the issues raised in the documentary and linked the topics to what could happen in the Dominican Republic.
The 5th Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival runs from September 8 to 13 in eleven cities in the Dominican Republic, covering hot-button issues like recycling, activism, food waste, and animal extinction. The program covers eleven cities nationwide and a total of 30 different screening locations.