Factory Farming in China and the Developing World
A Meat and Dairy Industries Article from All-Creatures.org

All of God's creatures have rights, a fact that most people don't seem to recognize. This includes both human and non-human animals, but not all of them can speak for themselves. As we continue to disregard the value of the lives of the billions of animals we eat, we also are destroying our air, land and water.

FROM

Ken Swensen, ACTAsia.org
Originaly published on Encyclopedia Britannica Advocacy for Animals
June 2015

In the coming years, enormous numbers of animals will be shifted from small farms and traditional Chinese backyard farms to industrialized production. Although exact figures are difficult to confirm, about 25 to 35 percent of the approximately 700 million pigs raised in China last year were raised on factory farms. That percentage is rapidly increasing because of the same economies of scale that eventually forced most American small farmers to abandon raising livestock—it’s much cheaper to raise animals in huge numbers on factory farms. In 1992 about 30 percent of pigs in the U.S. lived on large factory farms. Just 15 years later that figure was 95 percent. China is undergoing a similar transition.

While 40% of the worldwide grain harvest is grown on irrigated land, that figure is 80% in China, which has one fourth of the per capita fresh water that we have in the U.S. and is emptying its aquifers at a rapid rate. Meat products are by far the most water-intensive foods to produce.

One morning many years ago, I was surprised to find myself panicking after being slid into a full-body, closed MRI.

Feeling an intense fear which I later came to recognize as claustrophobia, I had to get out, take some deep breaths and try again. And again. I didn’t know at the time that the incident was a step towards becoming an animal advocate. Years later, while watching the movie Amazing Grace, I saw images of the layout for keeping captured Africans immobile on the ocean journey to a life of slavery. The way they were tightly confined in the dark holds of the ships reminded me of gestation crates for sows, so small that the captives could not sit up or turn around. I knew that I would have gone insane during the brutal months-long crossing.

At that moment there was a flash connection between human and animal suffering that instantly turned me into an animal advocate with a desire to work towards ending the institutionalized form of animal cruelty known as factory farming. Factory farms (also called CAFOs or concentrated animal feeding operations) raise thousands or even hundreds of thousands of animals in tight confinement, usually in barren, windowless sheds. Diet, space allocations, and treatment (including amputations of body parts) are designed to maximize financial profit.

The steady growth of factory farming in the developing world is by far the greatest threat to animals, both in terms of total numbers and aggregate suffering. Although we are making some progress in the U.S. due to the steadfast efforts of animal advocates and a slowly awakening public, worldwide the factory farming story grows steadily more desperate. Hundreds of millions of animals are added each year to the number driven insane by the brutal treatment and confinement. Factory farms are expanding in many developing countries including India, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa, but the growth in China is the greatest and most immediate threat. The trends in China offer a preview of a bleak global future that includes more animal suffering, enormous environmental degradation, and inevitably, greater human suffering.

China has a population of 1.34 billion, a rapidly growing middle class, a pent-up demand for meat and dairy products, and a proven ability to standardize the most efficient forms of industrial production. The authoritarian government is forcing urbanization on rural populations and eliminating small farms. Aware of the psychological impacts of the Great Famine, the government is committed to providing its citizens with a growing supply of animal-based food products.

In the coming years, enormous numbers of animals will be shifted from small farms and traditional Chinese backyard farms to industrialized production. Although exact figures are difficult to confirm, about 25 to 35 percent of the approximately 700 million pigs raised in China last year were raised on factory farms. That percentage is rapidly increasing because of the same economies of scale that eventually forced most American small farmers to abandon raising livestock—it’s much cheaper to raise animals in huge numbers on factory farms. In 1992 about 30 percent of pigs in the U.S. lived on large factory farms. Just 15 years later that figure was 95 percent. China is undergoing a similar transition.

When a nation’s factory farming system expands, it not only fulfills consumer demand, it creates additional demand. As meat and dairy products become more uniform, supply more predictable and prices more affordable, the size of the market grows. Big corporations enter the industry and compete for market share and revenue growth. They steadily improve efficiencies and reduce expenses—at great cost to the animals—while developing marketing campaigns to spur demand. Factory farming begets more factory farming.

If the Chinese match our average level of meat consumption (currently about twice theirs) and eliminate the small farmer, they would create a factory farming system several times the size of our own. The net effect would be the greatest increase in animal suffering ever experienced. That suffering reaches far beyond the factory farm gates, as we steadily shrink wildlife habitats in order to plant ever more grain and soybeans to feed the legions of pigs, chickens, and cattle.

The ecological impacts of such an expansion would exacerbate every major environmental problem we face, including climate change, deforestation, ocean acidification, soil erosion, and fresh water depletion. In fact, a case can be made that the steady increase in worldwide meat consumption enabled by the growth of factory farming is the single largest factor in worsening each of these problems, any one of which threatens the future of human civilization. Factory farming requires huge amounts of grain. Growing that grain requires huge amounts of land and water. The methods we use to produce the grain and raise the animals create enormous environmental damage.

Although almost every mainstream environmental writer has effectively ignored the impacts of rapidly rising worldwide meat consumption, Lester R. Brown, President of Earth Policy Institute, recognized the importance 20 years ago in Who Will Feed China? He wrote:

Never in history have so many people moved up the food chain so fast…. As China looks to consuming more meat in the future, it must also look for more grain. More meat means more grain—two kilograms of additional grain for each kilogram of poultry, four for pork, and seven for each kilogram of beef added in the feedlot…. With the cropland base shrinking and with water shortages spreading, much if not all the growth in demand for food in China translates directly into imports.

Today those imports are playing an outsized role in the global food market. China now imports 70 million tons of soybeans (almost two-thirds of the global export market) to feed its pigs while also buying or leasing large swaths of arable land in other countries. The U.S. Department of Agriculture predicts that China’s soybean imports will reach 110 million tons in the next decade, currently the entire world export production. The question may not be who will feed China, but who will feed China’s livestock, and will the world survive the environmental impacts?

In 2012, Lester Brown explored that question further in Full Planet, Empty Plates (with more wisdom page-for-page than any book I’ve read). He argues that like civilizations before us, this one will likely be brought down by environmental degradation, ultimately leading to food scarcity and societal chaos. This time, however, we will have created an inhospitable planet. Brown explains, with his trademark clarity, that saving the Amazon rainforest depends on curbing the growth in demand for soybeans; almost all the increase in China’s soybean usage comes from clearing rainforests in Brazil. As we grow more grain to feed more livestock, inappropriate and vulnerable acreage is turned into farms. In China and around the world, this leads to soil erosion and desertification.

As we pass “peak water” (Brown’s concept, similar to “peak oil” in that it holds that we are reaching the point of maximum availability of water and will thereafter experience worldwide decline and crisis), we will inevitably face major food shortages in an overpopulated world, according to Brown. Aquifers everywhere are being depleted at an alarming rate. While 40% of the worldwide grain harvest is grown on irrigated land, that figure is 80% in China, which has one fourth of the per capita fresh water that we have in the U.S. and is emptying its aquifers at a rapid rate. Meat products are by far the most water-intensive foods to produce. Incredibly, the Chinese government has reported that more than 50 percent of its fresh water is polluted, as is a large portion of its topsoil. Since it takes 1,000 tons of water to produce one ton of grain, importing grain is the most efficient way to import water, Brown notes. By importing alfalfa for its cows, soybeans for its pigs, and corn for its chickens, China is able to increase meat production while limiting domestic environmental damage and resource depletion.

Taking this strategy one step further, China has now secured a future supply of finished meat products from the U.S. In 2013, the WH Group (previously Shuanghui International), a Chinese company with strong government ties, purchased the American corporation Smithfield Foods, the largest producer of pork in the world. A recent lawsuit by residents in North Carolina filed against the new Chinese owners is both a worrisome harbinger and an ironic twist for Americans. Local residents claim that the WH Group is polluting the air and water around their homes by setting less stringent environmental controls than the company enforces at its Chinese factory farms. After outsourcing our pollution to China for decades, and thereby gaining lower costs on a multitude of products due in part to weak environmental regulations in China, the roles are reversing. Producing pork in the U.S. is now significantly cheaper than in China, due to our lax environmental regulations and relatively bountiful natural resources.

Is there a way to slow the worldwide growth of factory farming? It’s hard to feel optimistic given current trends. Someday, educated and compassionate people around the world will see that what we are doing to animals is terribly, horribly wrong. And one day, people everywhere will recognize that we don’t need animal products in a healthy diet. But those times may still be far in the future.

For right now, I believe our best strategy is to document, expose and protest the environmental damages of factory farming at every level – locally, nationally and globally. The evidence is clear that we are depleting our resources and poisoning our living space. The facts prove that a meat-eating environmentalist is an oxymoron. Let’s spread that message near and far—for ourselves and for the animals.


Ken Swensen volunteers for ACTAsia, supporting their work teaching Chinese schoolchildren compassion for animals and respect for the environment. A lifetime New Yorker, Ken runs a small business and has an MBA from New York University.


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