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201216Sep11:24

Ris­ing Num­ber of Farm Ani­mals Poses Envi­ron­men­tal and Pub­lic Health Risks

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pub­lished 16 Sep­tem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 16 Sep­tem­ber 2012
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Livestockpopulationsize trend TableThe global pop­u­la­tion of cat­tle, pigs, goats, and sheep increased 23 per­cent between 1980 and 2010, from 3.5 bil­lion to 4.3 bil­lion, accord­ing to research by the World­watch Insti­tute for its Vital Signs Online pub­li­ca­tion. These fig­ures con­tinue a trend of ris­ing farm ani­mal pop­u­la­tions, with harm­ful effects on the envi­ron­ment, pub­lic health, and global development.

Both pro­duc­tion and con­sump­tion of ani­mal prod­ucts are increas­ingly con­cen­trated in devel­op­ing coun­tries. In con­trast, due in part to a grow­ing aware­ness of the health con­se­quences of high meat con­sump­tion, the appetite for ani­mal prod­ucts is stag­nat­ing or declin­ing in many indus­trial countries.

The demand for meat, eggs, and dairy prod­ucts in devel­op­ing coun­tries has increased at a stag­ger­ing rate in recent decades,” says report co-​author Danielle Nieren­berg, direc­tor of Worldwatch’s Nour­ish­ing the Planet project. “While indus­tri­alised coun­tries still con­sume the most ani­mal prod­ucts, urban­i­sa­tion and ris­ing incomes in devel­op­ing coun­tries are spurring shifts to more meat-​heavy diets.”

Farm-​animal pro­duc­tion pro­vides a safety net for mil­lions of the world’s most vul­ner­a­ble peo­ple. But given the industry’s rapid and often poorly reg­u­lated growth, the biggest chal­lenge in the com­ing decades will be to pro­duce meat and other ani­mal prod­ucts in envi­ron­men­tally and socially sus­tain­able ways
Danielle Nieren­berg »

Con­cen­trated ani­mal feed­ing oper­a­tions (CAFOs), or fac­tory farms, are the most rapidly grow­ing sys­tem of farm ani­mal pro­duc­tion. The United Nations Food and Agri­cul­ture Orga­ni­za­tion (FAO) esti­mates that 80 per­cent of growth in the live­stock sec­tor now comes from these indus­trial pro­duc­tion sys­tems. CAFOs now account for 72 per­cent of poul­try pro­duc­tion, 43 per­cent of egg pro­duc­tion, and 55 per­cent of pork pro­duc­tion world­wide. But CAFOs pro­duce high lev­els of waste, use huge amounts of water and land for feed pro­duc­tion, con­tribute to the spread of human and ani­mal dis­eases, and play a role in bio­di­ver­sity loss. Farm ani­mal pro­duc­tion also con­tributes to cli­mate change: the indus­try accounts for an esti­mated 18 per­cent of the world’s green­house gas emis­sions, includ­ing 9 per­cent of the car­bon diox­ide, nearly 40 per­cent of the methane (a green­house gas 25 times more potent than car­bon diox­ide), and 65 per­cent of the nitrous oxide (300 times more potent as car­bon dioxide).

The envi­ron­ment is not all that is at stake with this rapidly shift­ing means of food pro­duc­tion; fac­tory farms pose a seri­ous threat to pub­lic health as well. Diets high in ani­mal fat and meat — par­tic­u­larly red meat and processed meats, such as hot dogs, bacon, and sausage — have been linked to obe­sity, dia­betes, car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease, and cer­tain types of cancer.

Although CAFOs orig­i­nated in Europe and North Amer­ica, they are becom­ing increas­ingly preva­lent in devel­op­ing regions like East and South­east Asia, where envi­ron­men­tal, animal-​welfare, pub­lic health, and labour stan­dards are often not as well-​established as in indus­tri­alised regions. The report stresses that to pre­vent seri­ous human and envi­ron­men­tal costs, pol­i­cy­mak­ers will need to strengthen pro­duc­tion reg­u­la­tions around the world.

Fur­ther high­lights from the report:

  • Between 1980 and 2005, per capita milk con­sump­tion in devel­op­ing coun­tries almost dou­bled, meat con­sump­tion more than tripled, and egg con­sump­tion increased fivefold.

  • Approximately75 per­cent of the new dis­eases that affected humans from 1999 to 2009 orig­i­nated in ani­mals or ani­mal products.

  • Because CAFOs rely on a nar­row range of com­mer­cial breeds selected for their high pro­duc­tiv­ity and low input needs, less-​popular indige­nous live­stock breeds are rapidly falling out of use: in 2010, the FAO reported that at least 21 per­cent of the world’s live­stock breeds are at risk of extinction.

  • Live­stock pro­duc­tion is a major dri­ver of defor­esta­tion: cat­tle enter­prises have been respon­si­ble for 6580 per­cent of the defor­esta­tion of the Ama­zon, and coun­tries in South Amer­ica are clear­ing large swaths of for­est and other land to grow ani­mal feed crops like maize and soybean.

(Source: World­watch Insti­tute press release, 23.03.2012)

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