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Intensive pig farming

Intensive pig farming, also known as pig factory farming, is the primary method of pig production, in which grower pigs are housed indoors in group-housing or straw-lined sheds, whilst pregnant sows are housed in gestation crates or pens and give birth in farrowing crates.

Gestation crates are one of the typical characteristics of intensive pig farming.

The use of gestation crates for pregnant sows has lowered birth production costs; Gestation crates or individual stalls are used as a way to nurture the animals and protect them first during pregnancy. Because the animals are vulnerable during this time, with some sows more aggressive than others, the practice of separating the animals in crates keeps them from fighting and injuring each other. In addition, the case has also been made that crates make it easier for hog farmers to monitor individual sow health and administer vaccines as needed.[1] Many of the world's largest producers of pigs (US, China, and Mexico) use gestation crates. The European Union has banned the use of gestation crates after the fourth week of pregnancy.[2] Intensive pig farmers often cut off tails, testes or teeth of pigs without anaesthetic.[3] Although combined use of an anesthetic and analgesic appears to be the most effective method for controlling pain associated with surgical castration, regulatory requirements and cost remain obstacles to practical application. Use of pharmaceuticals can burden producers with direct and indirect costs; the latter are associated with time delays and a potential need for additional veterinary assistance. Extra-label use of anesthetics and analgesics, while an option, is not ideal. Knowledge of effectiveness is not as great as it is for drugs approved for particular species and purposes. Extra-label use can also discourage research and development necessary to approve drugs for specific purposes.[4]

The environmental impacts of pig farming include problems posed to drinking water and algal bloom events.[5][6]

Description Edit

 
Sows in gestation crates.
 
A young piglet, note the dismembered tail to the left.
 
The result of tail docking a piglet.
 
Indoor group pens, note the slatted floor designed for waste removal.

Intensive piggeries are generally large warehouse-like buildings or barns with little exposure to sunlight or the outdoors. Most pigs are officially entitled to less than one square meter of space each.[7] Indoor pig systems allow many more pigs to be monitored than historical methods, ensuring lowered cost, and increased productivity. Buildings are ventilated and their temperature regulated.

Most domestic pig varieties are susceptible to sunburn and heat stress, and all pigs lack sweat glands and cannot cool themselves. Pigs have a limited tolerance to high temperatures and heat stress can lead to death. Maintaining a more specific temperature within the pig-tolerance range also maximizes growth and growth-to-feed ratio. Indoor piggeries have allowed pig farming to be undertaken in countries or areas with unsuitable climate or soil for outdoor pig raising.[8] In an intensive operation, pigs no longer need access to a wallow (mud), which is their natural cooling mechanism. Intensive piggeries control temperature through ventilation or drip water systems.

The way animals are housed in intensive systems varies, and depending on economic viability, dry or open time for sows can sometimes be spent in indoor pens or outdoor pens or pastures.

The pigs begin life in a farrowing or gestation crate, a small pen with a central cage, designed to allow the piglets to feed from their mother, the sow, while preventing her from moving around, crushing her children, and reducing aggression.[9] The crates are so small that the pigs cannot turn around.[10][11]

Artificial insemination is much more common than natural mating, as it allows up to 30-40 female pigs to be impregnated from a single boar.[12] Workers collect the semen by masturbating the boars, then insert it into the sows via a raised catheter known as a pork stork.[13] Boars are still physically used to excite the females prior to insemination, but are prevented from actually mating.[14]

When confirmed pregnant, sows are moved to farrowing crates, with litter, and will spend their time in gestation crates from before farrowing until weaning.[15] Injections with a high availability iron solution often are given, as sow's milk is low in iron. Vitamin D supplements are also given to compensate for the lack of sunlight. As the sows' bodies become less capable of handling the large litter sizes encouraged by the industry, the frequency of stillborn piglets generally increases with each litter.[16] These high litter sizes have doubled the death rates of sows, and as many as 25%-50% of sow deaths have been caused by prolapse, the collapse of the sow's rectum, vagina, or uterus.[17] Pig breeders repeat the cycle of impregnation and confinement for about 3 to 5 years or until the sow succumbs to her injuries, at which point she is then slaughtered for low-grade meat such as pies, pasties and sausage meat.[18]

Of the piglets born alive, 10% to 18% will not make it to weaning age, succumbing to disease, starvation, dehydration, or being accidentally crushed by their trapped mothers.[19][20] This death toll includes the runts, unusually small piglets who are considered economically unviable and killed by staff, typically by blunt trauma to the head.[21][22]

Piglets often have the following performed: castration, earmarking, tattooing for litter identification, tail docking, teeth clipping to prevent cannibalism, instability, aggression, and tail biting that is induced by the cramped environment.[19][23][24] Because anesthetic is not legally mandated and often economically unviable, these invasive procedures are usually done without any pain killers.[25] While wild piglets remain with their mothers for around 12 to 14 weeks, farmed piglets are weaned and removed from their mothers at between two and five weeks old.[3][26] They are then placed in sheds, nursery barns or directly to growout barns. While capable of living 10–12 years, most pigs are slaughtered when they are 5–6 months old.[9][27]

Indoor systems allow for the easy collection of waste. In an indoor intensive pig farm, manure can be managed through a lagoon system or other waste-management system. However, waste smell remains a problem which is difficult to manage.[28] Pigs in the wild or on open farmland are naturally clean animals.[19]

Statistics Edit

In the UK there are around 11,000 pig farms. Approximately 1,400 of these units house more than 1,000 pigs and contain about 85% of the total UK pig population.[29][30] Because of this, the vast majority of the pork products sold in the UK come from intensive farms.[31] There were around 50,000 pig farms in Australia in the 1960s.[32] Today, there are fewer than 1,400, and yet the total number of pigs bred and slaughtered for food has increased.[33] As of 2015, 49 farms housed 60% of the country's total pig population.[34][35]

Environmental impacts Edit

 
A typical waste lagoon, filled with pig manure.

Intensive pig farming adversely affects the surrounding environment.

Regulation Edit

Many countries have introduced laws to regulate treatment of intensively farmed pigs. However, there is no legal definition for free-range pigs, so retailers can label pork products as free-range without having to adhere to any standards or guidelines.[36] Only 3% of UK pigs spend their entire lives outdoors.[37]

European Union Edit

As of 2016, The European Union legislation has required that pigs be given environmental enrichment, specifically they must have permanent access to a sufficient quantity of material to enable proper investigation and manipulation activities.[38]

Under the legislation tail docking may only be used as a last resort. The law provides that farmers must first take measures to improve the pigs' conditions and, only where these have failed to prevent tail biting, may they tail dock.[39]

United States Edit

As of 2023, ten states have banned the use of gestation crates: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Ohio, Oregon, and Rhode Island.[40] Proposition 12, a California ballot measure passed in 2018, also bans the sale of whole, uncooked pork cuts throughout the state if the producers are noncompliant with the ban, affecting both in-state and out-of-state pig farmers.[41]

Discharge from concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) is regulated by the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In 2003, EPA revised the Clean Water Act to include permitting requirements and discharge limitations for CAFOs. In 2008, EPA revised the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) by requiring CAFOs to apply for permits before they can discharge manure.[42]

The federal Humane Slaughter Act requires pigs to be stunned before slaughter, although compliance and enforcement is questioned. There is concern from animal liberation and welfare groups that the laws have not resulted in a prevention of animal suffering and that there are "repeated violations of the Humane Slaughter Act at dozens of slaughterhouses".[43]

Criticism Edit

 
Sows are often confined in gestation crates, which usually does not allow the pig to turn around or lay down comfortably. Confinement farming methods have come under increasing public scrutiny due to animal welfare and environmental concerns.
Footage of a 'Quality Assured' labeled pig farm in England
Staff behaviour in pig farms.
Slaughterhouse footage showing pigs shocked, beaten, and boiled alive.

Dispute regarding farming methods Edit

Intensive piggeries have been negatively contrasted with free range systems. Such systems usually refer not to a group-pen or shedding system, but to outdoor farming systems. Those that support outdoor systems usually do so on the grounds that they are more animal friendly and allow pigs to experience natural activities (e.g., wallowing in mud, relating to young, rooting soil). Outdoor systems are usually less economically productive due to increased space requirements and higher morbidity, (though, when dealing with the killing of piglets and other groups of swine, the methods are the same.) They also have a range of environmental impacts, such as denitrification of soil[44][45] and erosion. Outdoor pig farming may also have welfare implications, for example, pigs kept outside may get sunburnt and are more susceptible to heat stress than in indoor systems, where air conditioning or similar can be used.[46][47] Outdoor pig farming may also increase the incidence of worms and parasites in pigs.[48][49] Management of these problems depends on local conditions, such as geography, climate, and the availability of skilled staff.

In certain environmental conditions – for example, a temperate climate – outdoor pig farming of these breeds is possible. However, there are many other breeds of pig suited to outdoor rearing, as they have been used in this way for centuries, such as Gloucester Old Spot and Oxford Forest. Following the UK ban of sow stalls, the British Pig Executive indicates that the pig farming industry in the UK has declined.[50] The increase in production costs[51] has led to British pig-products being more expensive than those from other countries, leading to increased imports and the need to position UK pork as a product deserving a price premium.

In 1997, Grampian Country Foods, then the UK's largest pig producer, pointed out that pigmeat production costs in the UK were 44 p/kg higher than on the continent. Grampian stated that only 2 p/kg of this was due to the ban on stalls; the majority of the extra costs resulted from the then strength of sterling and the fact that at that time meat and bone meal had been banned in the UK but not on the continent. A study by the Meat and Livestock Commission in 1999, the year that the gestation crate ban came into force, found that moving from gestation crates, to group housing added just 1.6 pence to the cost of producing 1 kg of pigmeat. French and Dutch studies show that even in the higher welfare group housing systems – ones giving more space and straw – a kg of pigmeat costs less than 2 pence more to produce than in gestation crates.[39]

Sow breeding systems Edit

Organized campaigns by animal activists have focused on the use of the gestation crate, such as the 'gestation crate' and farrowing crate. The gestation crate has now been banned in the UK, certain US states, and other European countries, although it remains part of pig production in much of the US and European Union.

The sows selected for breeding will be confined in a gestation crate. Hogs (males) are kept confined in caged crates of the same size for the duration of their lives in order to have their sperm repeatedly extracted by workers. In an intensive system, the sow will be placed in a crate prior to insemination and will stay there for at least the start of her pregnancy, depending on each country's laws and local regulations. The typical length of the sow's pregnancy is 3 months, 3 weeks, and 3 days. In certain cases, sows may spend this time in the crate. However, a variety of farming systems are used and the time in the crate may vary from 4 weeks to the whole pregnancy.

There is also current controversy and criticism of 'farrowing crates'. A farrowing crate houses the sow in one section and her piglets in another. It allows the sow to lie down and roll over to feed her piglets, but keeps her piglets in a separate section. This prevents the large sow from sitting on her piglets and killing them, which is quite common where the sow is not separated from the piglets.[52] Sows are also prevented from being able to move other than between standing and lying. Some models of farrowing crates may allow more space than others, and allow greater interaction between sow and young. Well-designed farrowing pens in which the sow has ample space can be just as effective as crates in preventing piglet mortality.[39] Some crates may also be designed with cost-effectiveness or efficiency in mind and therefore be smaller.

Authoritative industry data indicate that moving from sow stalls to group housing added 2 pence to the cost of producing 1 kg. of pigmeat.[39]

Many English fattening pigs are kept in barren conditions and are routinely tail docked. Since 2003 EU legislation has required pigs to be given environmental enrichment and has banned routine tail docking. However, 80% of UK pigs are tail docked.[39]

In 2015, use of sow crates was made illegal on New Zealand pig farms.[53]

Effects on traditional rural communities Edit

Common criticism of intensive piggeries is that they represent a corporatization of the traditional rural lifestyle. Critics feel the rise of intensive piggeries has largely replaced family farming. In large part, this is because intensive piggeries are more economical than outdoor systems, pen systems, or the sty. In many pork-producing countries (e.g., United States, Canada, Australia, Denmark) the use of intensive piggeries has led to market rationalization and concentration. The New York Times reported that keeping pigs and other animals in "unnaturally overcrowded" environments poses considerable health risks for workers, neighbors, and consumers.[54]

Waste management and public health concerns Edit

Contaminants from animal wastes can enter the environment through pathways such as through leakage of poorly constructed manure lagoons or during major precipitation events resulting in either overflow of lagoons and runoff from recent applications of waste to farm fields, or atmospheric deposition followed by dry or wet fallout. Runoff can leach through permeable soils to vulnerable aquifers that tap ground water sources for human consumption. Runoff of manure can also find its way into surface water such as lakes, streams, and ponds. An example of weather induced runoff having been recently reported in the wake of Hurricane Matthew.[55]

Many contaminants are present in livestock wastes, including nutrients, pathogens, veterinary pharmaceuticals and naturally excreted hormones. Improper disposal of animal carcasses and abandoned livestock facilities can also contribute to water quality problems in surrounding areas of CAFOs.[5]

Exposure to waterborne contaminants can result from both recreational use of affected surface water and from ingestion of drinking water derived from either contaminated surface water or ground water. High-Risk populations are generally the very young, the elderly, pregnant women, and immunocompromised individuals. Dermal contact may cause skin, eye, or ear infections. Drinking water exposures to pathogens could occur in vulnerable private wells.[5]

At Varkensproefcentrum Sterksel in the Netherlands, a pig farm has been created that reuses its waste streams. CO2 and ammonia from the pig manure are reused to grow algae which in turn are used to feed the pigs.[56]

Another method to reduce the effect on the environment is to switch to other breeds of pig. The enviropig is a genetically modified type of pig with the capability to digest plant phosphorus more efficiently than ordinary pigs, though the enviropig program ended in 2012 and did not reach commercial distribution.

Nutrient-rich runoff from CAFO's can contribute to Algal blooms in rivers, lakes and seas. The 2009 harmful algal bloom event off the coast of Brittany, France was attributed to runoff from an intensive pig farm.[6]

North Carolina Edit

As of 2010, North Carolina housed approximately ten million hogs, most of which are located in the eastern half of the state in industrialized CAFOs or Confined Animal Feeding Operations. This was not the case 20 years ago. The initial horizontal integration and the vertical integration that arose in this industry resulted in numerous issues, including issues of environmental disparity, loss of work, pollution, animal rights, and overall general public health. The most remarkable example of swine CAFO monopoly is found in the United States, where in 2001, 50 producers had control over 70% of total pork production. In 2001, the biggest CAFO had just over 710,000 sows.[57]

Originally, Murphy Family Farms horizontally integrated the North Carolina system. They laid the groundwork for the industry to be vertically integrated. Today[when?] the hog industry in North Carolina is led by Smithfield Foods, which has expanded into both nationwide and international production.[58]

The environmental justice problems in North Carolina's agroindustrialization of swine production seem to stem from the history of the coastal region's economy, which has relied heavily on black and low-income populations to supply the necessary agricultural labor. The industry's shift from family-owned hog farms to factory hogging has contributed to the frequent targeting of these areas.[59]

This swine production and pollution that accompanies factory hogging is concentrated in the parts of North Carolina that have the highest disease rates, the least access to medical care, and the greatest need for positive education and economic development.[60] Since hog production has become consolidated in the coastal region of N.C., the high water tables and low-lying flood plains have increased the risk and impact of hog farm pollution. A swine CAFO is made up of three parts: the hog house, the “lagoon,” and the “spray field.” Waste disposal techniques used by small-scale traditional hog farms, like using waste as fertilizer for commercially viable crops, were adopted and expanded for use by CAFOs. Lagoons are supposed to be protected with an impermeable liner, but some do not work properly. This can cause environmental damage, as seen in 1995 when a lagoon burst in North Carolina. This lagoon released 25 million gallons of noxious sludge into North Carolina's New River and killed approximately eight to ten million fish.[61]

The toxins emitted by the swine CAFOs can produce a variety of symptoms and illnesses ranging from respiratory disorders, headaches, and shortness of breath to hydrogen sulfide poisoning, bronchitis, and asthma. The potential for spray field runoff or lagoon leakage puts nearby residents in danger of contaminated drinking water, which can lead to diseases like samonellosis, giardiasis, Chlamydia, meningitis, cryptosporidiosis, worms, and influenza.[62]

Denmark Edit

Slaughterhouses and veterinarians are obliged to report pigs with injuries to the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, which forwards cases to the police. There were relatively few cases before 2006, but by 2008-9 there were about 300 per year.[63] When there are visible injuries, it represents not only a problem in animal welfare but also the farmers economy because parts or occasionally the entire carcass has to be discarded.[63] From 2006 to 2009 the number of pigs with injuries caused by hard objects, such as planks or chains received by slaughterhouses rose significantly. It was possibly related to a system introduced in 2006, which rewards "the rushed loading of animals onto vehicles", as well as a sharp increase in uneducated Eastern European farm workers unaware of Danish laws.[63][64]

Gestation crates were sometimes used on some Danish farms to restrict the movement of sows during pregnancy, as documented by British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver in a television programme for the UK's Channel 4 in 2009.[65] In other fields, such as bathing facilities for the pigs and floor material Danish requirements were higher than in the UK.[65] As of 2008 the practice was already prohibited for pigs exported to the UK.[66] The use of gestation crates became illegal in Denmark (as part of the EU) in 2013.[67][68][69]

New Zealand Edit

According to Scoop, in 2009 the New Zealand pork industry was "dealt a shameful public relations slap-in-the-face after its former celebrity kingpin, Mike King, outed their farming practices as 'brutal', 'callous' and 'evil'" on a May episode of New Zealand television show Sunday. King condemned the "appalling treatment" of factory farmed pigs. King observed conditions inside a New Zealand piggery, and saw a dead female pig inside a gestation crate, lame and crippled pigs and others that could barely stand, pigs either extremely depressed or highly distressed, pigs with scars and injuries, and a lack of clean drinking water and food.

Sow crate farming should be illegal and we should outlaw it right now. It is absolutely disgusting and I am sorry that I was part of it

— Mike King, 2009[70]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

US Government regulation
  • CAFO Hearing 9-6-2007, Written Statement of Commissioner Blackham[permanent dead link] National Association of State Departments of Agriculture, USA – contains history of CAFO Regulations
  • Animal Feeding Operations (AFOs) - Permitting Program, EPA's CAFO Industry Regulation
Proponent, neutral, and industry-related
  • The Pig Site – industry support site with feature articles and news, with an emphasis on intensive farming practices
  • Purdue University food science extension 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • Key industries: Hog farming in North Carolina LEARN NC, a program of the UNC School of Education, 2013
Criticism of intensive pig farming
  • – the New Zealand group SAFE campaign to end intensive pig farming.
  • SaveBabe.com Animals Australia's campaign to end pig factory farming featuring James Cromwell
  • Swine Production: A Global Perspective 2/7/2007 JOHN R. MOORE - Alltech Inc.
  • Pig Farming 2011-08-07 at the Wayback Machine Compassion in World Farming, UK
  • pork Factory farming.com

intensive, farming, also, known, factory, farming, primary, method, production, which, grower, pigs, housed, indoors, group, housing, straw, lined, sheds, whilst, pregnant, sows, housed, gestation, crates, pens, give, birth, farrowing, crates, gestation, crate. Intensive pig farming also known as pig factory farming is the primary method of pig production in which grower pigs are housed indoors in group housing or straw lined sheds whilst pregnant sows are housed in gestation crates or pens and give birth in farrowing crates Gestation crates are one of the typical characteristics of intensive pig farming The use of gestation crates for pregnant sows has lowered birth production costs Gestation crates or individual stalls are used as a way to nurture the animals and protect them first during pregnancy Because the animals are vulnerable during this time with some sows more aggressive than others the practice of separating the animals in crates keeps them from fighting and injuring each other In addition the case has also been made that crates make it easier for hog farmers to monitor individual sow health and administer vaccines as needed 1 Many of the world s largest producers of pigs US China and Mexico use gestation crates The European Union has banned the use of gestation crates after the fourth week of pregnancy 2 Intensive pig farmers often cut off tails testes or teeth of pigs without anaesthetic 3 Although combined use of an anesthetic and analgesic appears to be the most effective method for controlling pain associated with surgical castration regulatory requirements and cost remain obstacles to practical application Use of pharmaceuticals can burden producers with direct and indirect costs the latter are associated with time delays and a potential need for additional veterinary assistance Extra label use of anesthetics and analgesics while an option is not ideal Knowledge of effectiveness is not as great as it is for drugs approved for particular species and purposes Extra label use can also discourage research and development necessary to approve drugs for specific purposes 4 The environmental impacts of pig farming include problems posed to drinking water and algal bloom events 5 6 Contents 1 Description 2 Statistics 3 Environmental impacts 4 Regulation 4 1 European Union 4 2 United States 5 Criticism 5 1 Dispute regarding farming methods 5 2 Sow breeding systems 5 3 Effects on traditional rural communities 5 4 Waste management and public health concerns 5 5 North Carolina 5 6 Denmark 5 7 New Zealand 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDescription Edit nbsp Sows in gestation crates nbsp A young piglet note the dismembered tail to the left nbsp The result of tail docking a piglet nbsp Indoor group pens note the slatted floor designed for waste removal Intensive piggeries are generally large warehouse like buildings or barns with little exposure to sunlight or the outdoors Most pigs are officially entitled to less than one square meter of space each 7 Indoor pig systems allow many more pigs to be monitored than historical methods ensuring lowered cost and increased productivity Buildings are ventilated and their temperature regulated Most domestic pig varieties are susceptible to sunburn and heat stress and all pigs lack sweat glands and cannot cool themselves Pigs have a limited tolerance to high temperatures and heat stress can lead to death Maintaining a more specific temperature within the pig tolerance range also maximizes growth and growth to feed ratio Indoor piggeries have allowed pig farming to be undertaken in countries or areas with unsuitable climate or soil for outdoor pig raising 8 In an intensive operation pigs no longer need access to a wallow mud which is their natural cooling mechanism Intensive piggeries control temperature through ventilation or drip water systems The way animals are housed in intensive systems varies and depending on economic viability dry or open time for sows can sometimes be spent in indoor pens or outdoor pens or pastures The pigs begin life in a farrowing or gestation crate a small pen with a central cage designed to allow the piglets to feed from their mother the sow while preventing her from moving around crushing her children and reducing aggression 9 The crates are so small that the pigs cannot turn around 10 11 Artificial insemination is much more common than natural mating as it allows up to 30 40 female pigs to be impregnated from a single boar 12 Workers collect the semen by masturbating the boars then insert it into the sows via a raised catheter known as a pork stork 13 Boars are still physically used to excite the females prior to insemination but are prevented from actually mating 14 When confirmed pregnant sows are moved to farrowing crates with litter and will spend their time in gestation crates from before farrowing until weaning 15 Injections with a high availability iron solution often are given as sow s milk is low in iron Vitamin D supplements are also given to compensate for the lack of sunlight As the sows bodies become less capable of handling the large litter sizes encouraged by the industry the frequency of stillborn piglets generally increases with each litter 16 These high litter sizes have doubled the death rates of sows and as many as 25 50 of sow deaths have been caused by prolapse the collapse of the sow s rectum vagina or uterus 17 Pig breeders repeat the cycle of impregnation and confinement for about 3 to 5 years or until the sow succumbs to her injuries at which point she is then slaughtered for low grade meat such as pies pasties and sausage meat 18 Of the piglets born alive 10 to 18 will not make it to weaning age succumbing to disease starvation dehydration or being accidentally crushed by their trapped mothers 19 20 This death toll includes the runts unusually small piglets who are considered economically unviable and killed by staff typically by blunt trauma to the head 21 22 Piglets often have the following performed castration earmarking tattooing for litter identification tail docking teeth clipping to prevent cannibalism instability aggression and tail biting that is induced by the cramped environment 19 23 24 Because anesthetic is not legally mandated and often economically unviable these invasive procedures are usually done without any pain killers 25 While wild piglets remain with their mothers for around 12 to 14 weeks farmed piglets are weaned and removed from their mothers at between two and five weeks old 3 26 They are then placed in sheds nursery barns or directly to growout barns While capable of living 10 12 years most pigs are slaughtered when they are 5 6 months old 9 27 Indoor systems allow for the easy collection of waste In an indoor intensive pig farm manure can be managed through a lagoon system or other waste management system However waste smell remains a problem which is difficult to manage 28 Pigs in the wild or on open farmland are naturally clean animals 19 Statistics EditThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the UK there are around 11 000 pig farms Approximately 1 400 of these units house more than 1 000 pigs and contain about 85 of the total UK pig population 29 30 Because of this the vast majority of the pork products sold in the UK come from intensive farms 31 There were around 50 000 pig farms in Australia in the 1960s 32 Today there are fewer than 1 400 and yet the total number of pigs bred and slaughtered for food has increased 33 As of 2015 49 farms housed 60 of the country s total pig population 34 35 Environmental impacts Edit nbsp A typical waste lagoon filled with pig manure Main article Environmental impact of intensive pig farming Intensive pig farming adversely affects the surrounding environment Regulation EditMany countries have introduced laws to regulate treatment of intensively farmed pigs However there is no legal definition for free range pigs so retailers can label pork products as free range without having to adhere to any standards or guidelines 36 Only 3 of UK pigs spend their entire lives outdoors 37 European Union Edit As of 2016 The European Union legislation has required that pigs be given environmental enrichment specifically they must have permanent access to a sufficient quantity of material to enable proper investigation and manipulation activities 38 Under the legislation tail docking may only be used as a last resort The law provides that farmers must first take measures to improve the pigs conditions and only where these have failed to prevent tail biting may they tail dock 39 United States Edit As of 2023 ten states have banned the use of gestation crates Arizona California Colorado Florida Maine Massachusetts Michigan Ohio Oregon and Rhode Island 40 Proposition 12 a California ballot measure passed in 2018 also bans the sale of whole uncooked pork cuts throughout the state if the producers are noncompliant with the ban affecting both in state and out of state pig farmers 41 Discharge from concentrated animal feeding operations CAFOs is regulated by the federal Environmental Protection Agency EPA In 2003 EPA revised the Clean Water Act to include permitting requirements and discharge limitations for CAFOs In 2008 update EPA revised the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System NPDES by requiring CAFOs to apply for permits before they can discharge manure 42 The federal Humane Slaughter Act requires pigs to be stunned before slaughter although compliance and enforcement is questioned There is concern from animal liberation and welfare groups that the laws have not resulted in a prevention of animal suffering and that there are repeated violations of the Humane Slaughter Act at dozens of slaughterhouses 43 Criticism Edit nbsp Sows are often confined in gestation crates which usually does not allow the pig to turn around or lay down comfortably Confinement farming methods have come under increasing public scrutiny due to animal welfare and environmental concerns source source source source source source source source source source source source Footage of a Quality Assured labeled pig farm in England source source source source source source source source source source source source Staff behaviour in pig farms source source source source source source source source source source source source Slaughterhouse footage showing pigs shocked beaten and boiled alive Dispute regarding farming methods Edit Intensive piggeries have been negatively contrasted with free range systems Such systems usually refer not to a group pen or shedding system but to outdoor farming systems Those that support outdoor systems usually do so on the grounds that they are more animal friendly and allow pigs to experience natural activities e g wallowing in mud relating to young rooting soil Outdoor systems are usually less economically productive due to increased space requirements and higher morbidity though when dealing with the killing of piglets and other groups of swine the methods are the same They also have a range of environmental impacts such as denitrification of soil 44 45 and erosion Outdoor pig farming may also have welfare implications for example pigs kept outside may get sunburnt and are more susceptible to heat stress than in indoor systems where air conditioning or similar can be used 46 47 Outdoor pig farming may also increase the incidence of worms and parasites in pigs 48 49 Management of these problems depends on local conditions such as geography climate and the availability of skilled staff In certain environmental conditions for example a temperate climate outdoor pig farming of these breeds is possible However there are many other breeds of pig suited to outdoor rearing as they have been used in this way for centuries such as Gloucester Old Spot and Oxford Forest Following the UK ban of sow stalls the British Pig Executive indicates that the pig farming industry in the UK has declined 50 The increase in production costs 51 has led to British pig products being more expensive than those from other countries leading to increased imports and the need to position UK pork as a product deserving a price premium In 1997 Grampian Country Foods then the UK s largest pig producer pointed out that pigmeat production costs in the UK were 44 p kg higher than on the continent Grampian stated that only 2 p kg of this was due to the ban on stalls the majority of the extra costs resulted from the then strength of sterling and the fact that at that time meat and bone meal had been banned in the UK but not on the continent A study by the Meat and Livestock Commission in 1999 the year that the gestation crate ban came into force found that moving from gestation crates to group housing added just 1 6 pence to the cost of producing 1 kg of pigmeat French and Dutch studies show that even in the higher welfare group housing systems ones giving more space and straw a kg of pigmeat costs less than 2 pence more to produce than in gestation crates 39 Sow breeding systems Edit Organized campaigns by animal activists have focused on the use of the gestation crate such as the gestation crate and farrowing crate The gestation crate has now been banned in the UK certain US states and other European countries although it remains part of pig production in much of the US and European Union The sows selected for breeding will be confined in a gestation crate Hogs males are kept confined in caged crates of the same size for the duration of their lives in order to have their sperm repeatedly extracted by workers In an intensive system the sow will be placed in a crate prior to insemination and will stay there for at least the start of her pregnancy depending on each country s laws and local regulations The typical length of the sow s pregnancy is 3 months 3 weeks and 3 days In certain cases sows may spend this time in the crate However a variety of farming systems are used and the time in the crate may vary from 4 weeks to the whole pregnancy There is also current controversy and criticism of farrowing crates A farrowing crate houses the sow in one section and her piglets in another It allows the sow to lie down and roll over to feed her piglets but keeps her piglets in a separate section This prevents the large sow from sitting on her piglets and killing them which is quite common where the sow is not separated from the piglets 52 Sows are also prevented from being able to move other than between standing and lying Some models of farrowing crates may allow more space than others and allow greater interaction between sow and young Well designed farrowing pens in which the sow has ample space can be just as effective as crates in preventing piglet mortality 39 Some crates may also be designed with cost effectiveness or efficiency in mind and therefore be smaller Authoritative industry data indicate that moving from sow stalls to group housing added 2 pence to the cost of producing 1 kg of pigmeat 39 Many English fattening pigs are kept in barren conditions and are routinely tail docked Since 2003 EU legislation has required pigs to be given environmental enrichment and has banned routine tail docking However 80 of UK pigs are tail docked 39 In 2015 use of sow crates was made illegal on New Zealand pig farms 53 Effects on traditional rural communities Edit Common criticism of intensive piggeries is that they represent a corporatization of the traditional rural lifestyle Critics feel the rise of intensive piggeries has largely replaced family farming In large part this is because intensive piggeries are more economical than outdoor systems pen systems or the sty In many pork producing countries e g United States Canada Australia Denmark the use of intensive piggeries has led to market rationalization and concentration The New York Times reported that keeping pigs and other animals in unnaturally overcrowded environments poses considerable health risks for workers neighbors and consumers 54 Waste management and public health concerns Edit Contaminants from animal wastes can enter the environment through pathways such as through leakage of poorly constructed manure lagoons or during major precipitation events resulting in either overflow of lagoons and runoff from recent applications of waste to farm fields or atmospheric deposition followed by dry or wet fallout Runoff can leach through permeable soils to vulnerable aquifers that tap ground water sources for human consumption Runoff of manure can also find its way into surface water such as lakes streams and ponds An example of weather induced runoff having been recently reported in the wake of Hurricane Matthew 55 Many contaminants are present in livestock wastes including nutrients pathogens veterinary pharmaceuticals and naturally excreted hormones Improper disposal of animal carcasses and abandoned livestock facilities can also contribute to water quality problems in surrounding areas of CAFOs 5 Exposure to waterborne contaminants can result from both recreational use of affected surface water and from ingestion of drinking water derived from either contaminated surface water or ground water High Risk populations are generally the very young the elderly pregnant women and immunocompromised individuals Dermal contact may cause skin eye or ear infections Drinking water exposures to pathogens could occur in vulnerable private wells 5 At Varkensproefcentrum Sterksel in the Netherlands a pig farm has been created that reuses its waste streams CO2 and ammonia from the pig manure are reused to grow algae which in turn are used to feed the pigs 56 Another method to reduce the effect on the environment is to switch to other breeds of pig The enviropig is a genetically modified type of pig with the capability to digest plant phosphorus more efficiently than ordinary pigs though the enviropig program ended in 2012 and did not reach commercial distribution Nutrient rich runoff from CAFO s can contribute to Algal blooms in rivers lakes and seas The 2009 harmful algal bloom event off the coast of Brittany France was attributed to runoff from an intensive pig farm 6 North Carolina Edit As of 2010 North Carolina housed approximately ten million hogs most of which are located in the eastern half of the state in industrialized CAFOs or Confined Animal Feeding Operations This was not the case 20 years ago The initial horizontal integration and the vertical integration that arose in this industry resulted in numerous issues including issues of environmental disparity loss of work pollution animal rights and overall general public health The most remarkable example of swine CAFO monopoly is found in the United States where in 2001 50 producers had control over 70 of total pork production In 2001 the biggest CAFO had just over 710 000 sows 57 Originally Murphy Family Farms horizontally integrated the North Carolina system They laid the groundwork for the industry to be vertically integrated Today when the hog industry in North Carolina is led by Smithfield Foods which has expanded into both nationwide and international production 58 The environmental justice problems in North Carolina s agroindustrialization of swine production seem to stem from the history of the coastal region s economy which has relied heavily on black and low income populations to supply the necessary agricultural labor The industry s shift from family owned hog farms to factory hogging has contributed to the frequent targeting of these areas 59 This swine production and pollution that accompanies factory hogging is concentrated in the parts of North Carolina that have the highest disease rates the least access to medical care and the greatest need for positive education and economic development 60 Since hog production has become consolidated in the coastal region of N C the high water tables and low lying flood plains have increased the risk and impact of hog farm pollution A swine CAFO is made up of three parts the hog house the lagoon and the spray field Waste disposal techniques used by small scale traditional hog farms like using waste as fertilizer for commercially viable crops were adopted and expanded for use by CAFOs Lagoons are supposed to be protected with an impermeable liner but some do not work properly This can cause environmental damage as seen in 1995 when a lagoon burst in North Carolina This lagoon released 25 million gallons of noxious sludge into North Carolina s New River and killed approximately eight to ten million fish 61 The toxins emitted by the swine CAFOs can produce a variety of symptoms and illnesses ranging from respiratory disorders headaches and shortness of breath to hydrogen sulfide poisoning bronchitis and asthma The potential for spray field runoff or lagoon leakage puts nearby residents in danger of contaminated drinking water which can lead to diseases like samonellosis giardiasis Chlamydia meningitis cryptosporidiosis worms and influenza 62 Denmark Edit Slaughterhouses and veterinarians are obliged to report pigs with injuries to the Ministry of Food Agriculture and Fisheries which forwards cases to the police There were relatively few cases before 2006 but by 2008 9 there were about 300 per year 63 When there are visible injuries it represents not only a problem in animal welfare but also the farmers economy because parts or occasionally the entire carcass has to be discarded 63 From 2006 to 2009 the number of pigs with injuries caused by hard objects such as planks or chains received by slaughterhouses rose significantly It was possibly related to a system introduced in 2006 which rewards the rushed loading of animals onto vehicles as well as a sharp increase in uneducated Eastern European farm workers unaware of Danish laws 63 64 Gestation crates were sometimes used on some Danish farms to restrict the movement of sows during pregnancy as documented by British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver in a television programme for the UK s Channel 4 in 2009 65 In other fields such as bathing facilities for the pigs and floor material Danish requirements were higher than in the UK 65 As of 2008 update the practice was already prohibited for pigs exported to the UK 66 The use of gestation crates became illegal in Denmark as part of the EU in 2013 67 68 69 New Zealand Edit According to Scoop in 2009 the New Zealand pork industry was dealt a shameful public relations slap in the face after its former celebrity kingpin Mike King outed their farming practices as brutal callous and evil on a May episode of New Zealand television show Sunday King condemned the appalling treatment of factory farmed pigs King observed conditions inside a New Zealand piggery and saw a dead female pig inside a gestation crate lame and crippled pigs and others that could barely stand pigs either extremely depressed or highly distressed pigs with scars and injuries and a lack of clean drinking water and food Sow crate farming should be illegal and we should outlaw it right now It is absolutely disgusting and I am sorry that I was part of it Mike King 2009 70 See also EditAnimal industrial complex Veterinary ethicsReferences Edit FARROWING AND GESTATION CRATES osborne 16 April 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2023 Werblow Steve 27 January 2014 Gestation crates News from the front lines Pork Network Retrieved 3 October 2015 a b Pig welfare ciwf org uk Retrieved 2019 06 03 Welfare Implications of Swine Castration AVMA 25 May 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2023 a b c Burkholder JoAnn Libra Bob Weyer Peter Heathcote Susan Kolpin Dana Thorne Peter S Wichman Michael 2007 Impacts of Waste from Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations on Water Quality Environmental Health Perspectives 115 2 308 312 doi 10 1289 ehp 8839 ISSN 0091 6765 PMC 1817674 PMID 17384784 a b Chrisafis Angelique Lethal algae take over beaches in northern France The Guardian Retrieved October 10 2013 Key figures for pig accommodation in England legislative requirements PDF AHDB Pork Archived from the original PDF on 3 June 2019 Australian pork page on Pig welfare Australainpork com au Archived from the original on 9 October 2007 Retrieved 28 July 2017 a b Cutler R Holyoake P 2007 The Structure and Dynamics of the Pig Meat Industry prepared for Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry PDF Opinion on Free Farrowing Systems PDF Farm Animal Welfare Committee Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2019 Farrowing Fact Sheet Viva The Vegan Charity 2016 01 06 Retrieved 2019 06 03 Pigs The Vegetarian Society Vegetarian Society Retrieved 2019 06 03 Inseminating sows Qld Government Department of Agriculture and Fisheries permanent dead link Collecting semen from boars Qld Government Department of Agriculture and Fisheries permanent dead link Pigs Australian Pork Limited 2017 Fact Sheet Reproductive Health PDF australianpork com au Australian Pork Limited 2012 Greenaway Twilight 2018 10 01 We ve bred them to their limit death rates surge for female pigs in the US The Guardian Retrieved 2018 11 17 Mitchell Angella 2002 Animal FAQs An Encyclopedia of Animal Abuse Troubador Publishing p 133 ISBN 1899293728 a b c Industry Focus australianpork com au Australian Pork Limited Pre weaning mortality pigprogress net Pig Progress 13 July 2010 Model code of practice for the welfare of animals Pigs Primary Industries Report Series third edition 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Best of British The Pig Industry Exposed PDF Animal Aid The risks associated with tail biting in pigs and possible means to reduce the need for tail docking considering the different housing and husbandry systems Scientific Opinion of the Panel on Animal Health and Welfare EFSA Journal 5 12 611 2007 doi 10 2903 j efsa 2007 611 Cutler R Holyoake P 2007 The Structure and Dynamics of the Pig Meat Industry prepared for Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry PDF agriculture gov au Video Gallery aussiepigs com Archived from the original on 2019 06 02 Retrieved 2019 06 02 Revisiting Weaning Age Trends Dynamics Nationalhogfarmer com 15 October 2005 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Pigs Production Cycle Australian Pork G Galvin K D Casey S A Lowe N A Hudson M A Atzeni E J McGahan 12 October 2003 Spatial Variability Of Odor Emissions From Anaerobic Piggery Lagoons In Queensland Air Pollution from Agricultural Operations III Proceedings of the 12 15 October 2003 Conference Research Triangle Park North Carolina USA St Joseph MI American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers pp 292 302 701P1403 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2008 Pig Holdings in the UK pork ahdb org uk Retrieved 2019 06 03 Reduction in number of UK pig farms pork ahdb org uk Retrieved 2019 06 03 Justin 2016 08 16 MAJOR INVESTIGATION INTO UK PIG FARMING REVEALS 90 ARE FACTORY FARMED Viva The Vegan Charity Archived from the original on 2019 06 03 Retrieved 2019 06 03 Cutler R Holyoake P 2007 The Structure and Dynamics of the Pig Meat Industry prepared for Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry PDF Where have all the pig farmers gone ABC Rural 5 May 2014 Pigs for meat pork AgriFutures Australia Archived from the original on 2018 04 15 Retrieved 2019 06 03 Australian Pig Annual 2010 2011 PDF Australian Pork Limited What s Wrong with High Welfare Animal Products PDF Animal Aid Pig farming Pig welfare Free range pork rspca org uk Retrieved 2019 06 03 COMMISSION RECOMMENDATION EU 2016 336 EUR Lex europa eu 9 March 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2017 a b c d e Species pigs Compassion in World Farming Ciwf org uk Retrieved 28 July 2017 Ufer Danielle J April 24 2023 Farm Animal Welfare Policies Cover Breeding Sows Veal Calves or Laying Hens in 14 U S States United States Department of Agriculture Archived from the original on May 2 2023 Retrieved May 13 2023 Marceau Justin Kysar Doug May 12 2023 The Supreme Court s ruling on Prop 12 is a win against factory farming But the pigs lives will still suck Vox Archived from the original on May 13 2023 Retrieved May 13 2023 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2011 04 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Animal Welfare Institute Quarterly Humane Slaughter Act Resolution Introduced Awionline org Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2017 The fate of nitrogen in outdoor pig production PDF Edpsciences org Archived from the original PDF on 31 August 2004 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 06 25 Retrieved 2008 12 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Managing Heat Stress in Outdoor pigs Depts ttu edu Archived from the original on 6 July 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Heat stress index chart for swine producers Thepigsite com Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Roepstorff A Murrell KD May 1997 Transmission dynamics of helminth parasites of pigs on continuous pasture Ascaris suum and Trichuris suis Int J Parasitol 27 5 563 72 doi 10 1016 S0020 7519 97 00022 2 PMID 9193950 Management Control and Prevention Managing Pig Health and Treating Pig Dieases on ThePigSite com The Pig Site Archived from the original on November 24 2006 Retrieved 28 July 2017 British Pig Executive market update September 2005 PDF Bpex org Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Another Move Away from Pork Crates Archived 2012 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Farm Futures May 8 2012 Piglet Losses University of Illinois Extension November 5 2003 Sow crates to be phased out by 2015 The New Zealand Herald 1 December 2010 Retrieved 4 October 2011 Kakutani Michiko 20 November 2009 You Know That Chicken Is Chicken Right The New York Times Retrieved 28 July 2017 via NYTimes com Fritz Arelis R Hernandez Angela Mooney Chris Fritz Arelis R Hernandez Angela Mooney Chris 16 October 2016 Factory farming practices are under scrutiny again in N C after disastrous hurricane floods The Washington Post Retrieved 28 July 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 442 Innovatienetwek onlinetouch nl Retrieved 28 July 2017 Swine production a global perspective En engormix com 7 February 2007 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Ladd Anthony Edwards Bob 2002 Corporate Swine Capitalist Pigs A Decade of Environmental Injustice in North Carolina Social Justice 29 3 26 46 Wimberley Ronald C Morris Libbly V 1997 The Southern Black Belt A National Perspective Lexington University of Kentucky a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Raine J Environmental Justice Issues of the North Carolina Swine Industry Masters thesis Durham NC Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment 1998 Orlando Laura McFarms Go Wild Dollars and Sense July August 1998 cited in Scully Matthew Dominion St Martin s Griffin p 257 Donham K 1998 The impact of industrial swine production on human health In Thu K Durrenberger E eds Pigs Profits and Rural Communities Albany NY State University of New York Press pp 73 83 a b c Andreas Lindquist 26 July 2010 Danske svin bliver banket gule og bla Politiken Retrieved 31 May 2016 Alleged Increase in Pig Cruelty The Pig Site Retrieved 28 July 2017 a b Response to Jamie Saves Our Bacon Archived from the original on May 4 2009 Retrieved 2009 12 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Danish Bacon and Meat Council January 2009 Christian Coff David Barling Michiel Korthals Thorkild Nielsen Ethical Traceability and Communicating Food pp 90 91 Springer 2008 ISBN 1 4020 8523 0 Jacky Turner Animal Breeding Welfare and Society Earthscan London ISBN 978 1844075898 Humane Society International Canada Ban Gestation Crates Retrieved 31 May 2016 Anima 25 October 2012 Livet i fikseringsboksen Retrieved 31 May 2016 Mike King Condemns NZ Pig Cruelty Scoop News Scoop co nz Retrieved 28 July 2017 External links EditUS Government regulationCAFO Hearing 9 6 2007 Written Statement of Commissioner Blackham permanent dead link National Association of State Departments of Agriculture USA contains history of CAFO Regulations Animal Feeding Operations AFOs Permitting Program EPA s CAFO Industry Regulation North Carolina State Government Study on Ammonia Concentration in the AirProponent neutral and industry relatedThe Pig Site industry support site with feature articles and news with an emphasis on intensive farming practices Purdue University food science extension Archived 2009 03 25 at the Wayback Machine Key industries Hog farming in North Carolina LEARN NC a program of the UNC School of Education 2013Criticism of intensive pig farminglovepigs org nz the New Zealand group SAFE campaign to end intensive pig farming SaveBabe com Animals Australia s campaign to end pig factory farming featuring James Cromwell Swine Production A Global Perspective 2 7 2007 JOHN R MOORE Alltech Inc Pig Farming Archived 2011 08 07 at the Wayback Machine Compassion in World Farming UK pork Factory farming com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intensive pig farming amp oldid 1177616980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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