Posts Tagged ‘battery cages’

Your Favourite Blogs — and Mine — in 2011!

Friday, January 6th, 2012

My first post on New Year’s Day this year celebrated the ban on barren battery hen cages in the European Union. On January 1, 2012 it became illegal to keep chickens in these cages. But be assured, our work doesn’t stop there; far from it! Now we focus even more intently on other areas of factory farming in Europe and internationally. Our aim for this year is to take the fight against factory farming to new audiences across the world.

Based on the number of visits made last year to A Compassionate World, two of the three most popular blogs were about chickens.

The most popular, ‘Have you seen the news?’ celebrated the historic agreement reached in the USA that could see an end to the barren battery cage there.

‘Why is animal welfare of any importance?’ was the second most popular blog. Here, I explained why Compassion is concerned with farmed animals. It isn’t just because of their welfare. It’s also because factory farming is a wastefully inefficient way of producing food and it harms the environment.

Coming in third place was ‘Reflections on a cage ban’ where I made the link between the EU barren cage ban and the ex-battery hens adopted by my wife Helen and I.

Philip's Hen

Huckle

‘Back at home, our new hen nestles into a bed of straw,’ I wrote. ‘It’s the first time she has ever made a nest. She lays an egg. I can see the difference made to the life of this one sensitive creature. How wondrous then that, from 1st January next year, the tireless efforts of compassionate people everywhere will have touched the lives of so many millions more.’

Another chicken related topic I wrote about was our Good Farm Animal Welfare Awards. This included the Good Egg Award given to companies that pledge to use or sell only cage-free eggs.
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Chickens: The Big Move

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

The clock ticks inexorably toward a minute past midnight on January 1st, 2012 when barren battery cages and the sale of eggs laid by chickens in them will be illegal throughout the European Union.

This date is an important marker in our effort to end factory farming by 2050.

Barren battery cages are so small that a chicken cannot even stretch her wings in them. They do not include any facilities for her to perch, nest or scratch. In Europe, a battery cage typically holds four or five hens with a legal floor space allowance per bird of less than an A4 sheet of paper.

As important a victory for farmed animals as this is – and one that would not have been possible without you and thousands of others who oppose factory farming – our attention is now set on the next step.

We must end the so-called ‘enriched’ cage, which, for many farms, is replacing the barren battery cage. No chicken deserves to live in any cage. Further, we seek to ban the sale of eggs from chickens in enriched cages.

‘Enriched’ cages may be slightly larger than barren battery cages but they will still hold, depending on their size and design, ten to 60 or more hens. They must include a nest box for egg laying, some litter material for pecking and scratching and 15cm of perch for each hen. But these “enrichments” are not enough to improve significantly the birds’ welfare. ‘Enriched’ cages, like barren battery cages, still crowd birds together and severely restrict their movement and natural behaviour.

This is why we will not stop until all cages for all egg-laying chickens are illegal throughout the EU as well as the sale of eggs from them. Compassion believes every chicken must live in a well-managed cage-free system which includes plenty of access to the outdoors.

Sadly, many, if not all, chickens alive today will never be able to fulfil their behavioural and psychological needs. They will never bath in dust, doze in the sun, grub for food in the ground and live in social groups contentedly with their own kind. This is why we believe making the barren battery cage illegal and banning enriched cages are important steps toward ending factory farming.

There are some lucky birds, though, who are given a second chance.

I know because we share our home with four of them. My wife, Helen, and I celebrated recently our first year of living with Henna, Honey, Hetty and Hope. We witnessed bedraggled birds blossom into healthy hens who treat each day as a new adventure. They enrich our lives more than we can possibly say. On our recent honeymoon I wrote about them. I look forward to sharing with you soon here our six-part story, ‘Living with hens’.

The good news is that our hens are not alone. The Battery Hen Welfare Trust says that in the last three years some 60,000 ex-battery hens annually started new lives in people’s gardens. Further, since 2004 more than 276,000 lucky chickens moved from indoor, intensive cages to outdoor, extensive back yards. By the way, have you seen the heart-warming photographs taken by Ed Thompson of ex-battery hens given a new lease on life? This lovely photo essay was recently featured by National Geographic magazine.

More than a quarter of a million re-homed hens is a lot of birds but the number pales into comparison when there are some 360 million egg-laying chickens in the EU. About two-thirds of them are confined in barren battery cages.

Nevertheless, as important as it is to help each and every individual bird we must also end the institutional practice of keeping them in cages.

This is why I ask you to join us in the Big Move!

Have you seen the news?

Friday, July 8th, 2011

And I don’t mean about the News of the World! I mean the news of an historic agreement reached in the USA that could see an end to barren battery cages for laying hens. And with the vast majority of the 280 million hens in the US imprisoned in the most cramped battery cages, news of a national breakthrough is simply huge.

So, what’s the story? The agreement has been reached in the USA between the Humane Society of the United States and the main US egg industry organisation, United Egg Producers. Both organisations have agreed to work together to enact federal legislation that will phase out barren battery cages for egg laying hens. It will also seek to introduce mandatory labelling telling consumers how the eggs were produced. The agreement stops short of banning larger, so-called ‘enriched’ cages. This would bring the US broadly in line with the European Union position on laying hens, which will see barren battery cages banned from 1st January 2012. It would mean that the US too would be joining The Big Move!

Clearly, there’s a lot of water to go under the bridge yet before this agreement becomes law. If enacted as agreed, it would represent the biggest milestone for farm animal protection since Europe started phasing out barren battery cages in 1999. As with the European law, it doesn’t go far enough. All egg-laying hens should live cage-free lives, rather than confined in battery cages where they can’t even stretch their wings. The new development in the US, whilst falling short of this, is a very significant step in the right direction.

Award-winning corporates
And here in the UK, we’ve been proud to celebrate the latest wave of companies committing to cage-free egg policies. Our Good Farm Animal Welfare Awards in London this week recognised 48 companies that have pledged new animal-friendly policies on eggs, chicken and dairy.

The big news is that ASDA, Ben & Jerry’s, Green & Blacks, and Yeo Valley were amongst those receiving awards on the night for pledging to pasture-based and calf-friendly dairying. Well-known cake brand, Mr Kipling, was prominent amongst the ‘Good Egg’ award winners continuing the corporate trend in Europe toward exclusive use of cage-free eggs.

Several hundred delegates from some of the biggest corporates in the land were with us in Covent Garden. Huge congratulations to all 48 companies recognised for their animal welfare-friendly policies on the night. It was great working with TV Chef, Paul Merrett, who was our brilliant host for the evening. We were positively spoilt by also having the speaking talents of BBC Food Presenter, Nigel Barden, broadcaster and writer Allegra McEvedy MBE, and actress Alexandra Bastedo. Great too, to have last year’s host, Bill Oddie, with us as well as actress Kate Ford and novelist Victoria Connelly. A big thank you to all of them!

And huge congratulations to Waitrose for winning Compassionate Supermarket of the Year, Sainsbury’s for Best Volume Supermarket and the Co-operative for Most Improved.

Ben & Jerry's receiving their Good Dairy Award
Ilaria Ida, Social Mission Manager of Ben & Jerry's Europe and the Ben & Jerry’s cow celebrate winning a Good Dairy Award

Mr Kipling receiving their Good Egg Award
Annette Pledger, Senior Brand Manager at Mr Kipling receives their Good Egg Award

Farrowing crates & battery cages

Friday, June 17th, 2011

On some things we’ve seen progress, on others progress remains slow.  An example of the latter in Britain is the ongoing use of the so-called ‘farrowing crateto confine mother pigs in industrial systems.  On the other hand, we are on the cusp of a major breakthrough for egg laying hens with a ban on barren cages due next year.

Twenty years ago, I reported on a farming press headline declaring that intensive pig farming was an “industry still in the dark ages”.  The Farmers Guardian article was referring to the use of farrowing crates that are used to confine mothering sows from when they give birth (farrow) to the time their piglets are weaned weeks later.  I quoted two researchers from the University of Guelph as saying, “Crates are so narrow that with almost every move the sow unavoidably rubs herself against the bars and partitions, frequently causing abrasions and, in some cases, swellings”.  I ended the article saying, “Freedom at farrowing is every sow’s right.  The pig industry must drag itself out of the dark ages.  Dispensing with the farrowing crate would be a good start.”  Sadly, twenty years later on, the farrowing crate is still the predominant system for sows kept indoors.  It’s time for change.  We are upping our campaign in the UK and Europe to see an end to this appalling system. 

One major area where it does look like we are seeing progress is with the long-awaited ban on the barren battery cage for laying hens in Europe.  Our Defend the big move campaign aims to make sure that Europe doesn’t back-slide on its promise to consign battery cages to the scrapheap of history from January next year.

Big leap for the ‘big move’

It’s a campaign that has motivated many people; one of them is Jeremy Hayward, the Vice-chair of Compassion’s Board.  Jeremy is taking a big leap – skydiving to raise money for our ‘big move’ campaign against barren cages.  And I’ll be interviewing him soon after his daring feat to find out just how he felt hurtling through the air, arms spread, in aid of hens unable to stretch their wings. 

If you would like to learn more or sponsor Jeremy’s big leap, please click here .

And talking of hens, I’m often asked to write more about my four adopted hens.  So I’ve done just that.  Coming shortly will be a series of blog articles entitled, ‘Living with hens’, giving insights into the way they live; their likes, dislikes and antics as they go about reshaping my previously tidy garden!

A huge thanks to you and all our supporters for flying the flag for farm animals; I remain humbled and overwhelmed by your generosity and commitment.

Easter, eggs and sunshine

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

In the run-up to Easter, we’ve focused on our campaign to win egg-laying hens freedom from the barren battery cage. Thank you so much to all of you who’ve taken part in our actions to ‘Defend the Big Move’. It seems a scandal that, having had 12 years to get ready, some European countries are suggesting that more time is needed before barren battery cages are banned. Our message is clear; it’s time for all EU states to stick to their promise and ban barren battery cages by 1st January 2012.Russell Wood/Compassion in World Farming

Huge thanks to TV presenter, Bill Oddie and author, Victoria Connelly, for their support on Tuesday, when Compassion took over Trafalgar Square to ensure that our message was heard!

This Easter will be a particularly busy and exciting one for me; this Saturday I marry Helen, my wonderful fiancée of 18 months, at our wedding and reception just outside Petersfield, Hampshire. So I’m very much hoping the sun continues to shine, and wish you all a very happy bank holiday weekend!

Looking Forward to 2011

Friday, December 31st, 2010

Every New Year’s Eve many of us raise a glass to toast health and happiness to our loved ones. I would like to take this opportunity to wish you a happy and prosperous year ahead and to thank you for all your support during 2010. I would also like to share with you how I see the coming year for Compassion.

The year ahead will be hugely important for us. It will see us focus on taking our message more strongly than ever across Europe. We will set up new teams to take forward our programmes in the key countries of France, Italy and Poland. We will build our presence in the Netherlands. And we will revamp our partnership activities with kindred societies through the farm animal campaigning coalition, of which we’ve been at the forefront since the 1990s.
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The year in numbers – 2010

Friday, December 24th, 2010

As 2010 draws to a close, here is a reflection of the year in numbers, and thank you for being part of bringing about a compassionate world for farm animals:

• 21 universities were celebrated for going cage-free on their eggs and/or pledging to use only higher welfare chicken at our first ever University Good Farm Animal Welfare Awards.

• 25 million hens throughout Europe are now set to benefit from our ‘Good Egg’ Award winners’ policies.

• 36 more UK local councils were persuaded to go cage-free on their eggs, thanks to our ‘Cage-free councils’ campaign.

• 39 is the weight of birds in kilograms that can be kept in a square metre of floor space in UK broiler chicken sheds. But it could have been worse. We persuaded Agriculture Minister, Jim Paice, not to buckle under industry pressure, and to only allow a maximum stocking density of 39kg per square metre for chickens, instead of 42kg permitted by European rules.
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Commission stands firm on cage ban

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

The European Commission has once again underscored that it doesn’t intend to delay the ban on barren battery cages, due to come into force in 2012. This is greatly welcome news. Especially in the face of an attempt by Poland earlier this year to derail the timescale.

The latest statement from Commissioner John Dalli, in answer to a European Parliamentary Question, should help to focus the minds of governments and industry to ensuring that all hens are out of these appalling cruel cages by the 1st January 2012, as prescribed in the law.

But as the saying goes, ‘it isn’t over till it’s over’, and we will continue to counter attempts for a delay on the ban, wherever they come from, through our campaigns and lobbying. And thank you to all those who continue to support this most important of campaigns. The fate of many millions of hens relies on it.

Flickr

Campaigners outside the Polish Embassy in Stockholm, Sweden DSC00756Campaigners in Bratislava, Slovakia Supporters sign a petition to defend the the hens in Warsaw, PolandCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in The Hague, NetherlandsMr. Jankowski, The  Ambassador’s personal councilor with Amalia Sotirhou at the Polish Embassy in Psychiko, GreeceCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in Berlin, Germany Campaigners at the Polish Embassy in Helsinki, PolandCampaigners at the Polish Embassy in Tallinn, Estonia

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