Council Urged To Reject 'Mega-Farms' That House Hundreds Of Thousands Of Animals (2024)

Campaigners have raised the alarm over proposals for two mega-farms in Norfolk that would house thousands of pigs and millions of chickens.

PETA is urging people to lodge objections to the plans with Borough Council of King’s Lynn and West Norfolk.

According to the planning application documents, the new chicken farm would hold 870,000 chickens at a time across 20 sheds. This would amount to around 6.7 million a year. The pig farm application proposes to build 14 “finishing units” that would each house up to 1,000 pigs at a time. Over the course of a year, that would be 48,000 pigs being fattened for slaughter there.

Hundreds of objections to the plans have already been submitted to the council. People living in villages close to the proposed sites have campaigned against the farms. PETA is additionally aiming for 50,000 signatures on its petition against the farms, which currently has 14,010.

Significant welfare concerns

PETA says that the huge intensive farms will cause serious suffering to the pigs and chickens kept on them.

The chickens will be raised on the Methwold location from when they are one day old until they are sent to slaughter at 38 to 40 days old. They will never go outside and will be required to have no more than the size of an A4 sheet of paper each.

The pigs will arrive on Feltwell Farm at 12 weeks old and stay there for 12 more weeks until they reach slaughter weight. Feltwell Farm says in its application that it new sheds will allow it to give more space to pigs, moving up from Red Tractor to RSPCA Assured stocking densities.

But PETA warns that the pigs and chickens will still experience stress, frustration, and suffering.

Undercover investigations

The two companies behind the applications, Crown Chicken and Wayland Farms, are both owned by food producer Cranswick. Undercover investigations at Cranswick-owned farms have previously revealed animals living in appalling conditions.

In 2023, Animal Justice Project shared footage it had taken at Bickmarsh Hall, a Red Tractor-approved pig mega-farm. The investigation showed pigs being hit and kicked by workers, who also reportedly used illegal electric prods. One pig with a rectal prolapse was cannibalized by others and an ill piglet was left to be trampled by others for 13 hours before being removed from the pen. Dead pigs were left in bins around the farm.

In 2021, an investigation by Open Cages revealed chickens suffering on an intensive Cranswick-owned farm. Due to selective breeding to make them grow fast, many chickens had leg deformities and couldn’t walk. They lay in their own waste, which burned their skin.

Cranswick is reportedly currently investigating one of its “high-welfare” free range pig farms in Norfolk after footage emerged of a worker beating a pig to death there with an iron bar last summer. At the time of the incident, the farm was operated by pig meat producer Pilgrim’s.

Environmental concerns

Campaigners have raised several environmental concerns about the plans, including air, water, and noise pollution. Locals are worried about increased traffic of large trucks, bad smells from animal waste, and poor air quality.

A Cranswick-operated pig slaughterhouse in Norfolk leaked contaminated liquid into a rare chalk stream in 2019. The company was subsequently fined £75,000 for the pollution.

The number of intensive chicken and pig farms has been rising in the UK, and pollution with them. Sixty percent of fine particulate pollution in the UK comes from ammonia from farms, released from animal manure and synthetic fertilizer. The ammonia drifts to cities and helps create deadly particulate matter.

Waste runoff has caused serious environmental problems around the farms, including algal blooms in the River Wye. Campaigners have recently launched legal action against the Environment Agency and UK government for failing to protect the River Wye from waste generated by the 25 million chickens intensively farmed in its catchment.

Feed for intensively farmed chickens and pigs has been linked to deforestation in South America. In 2019, a million tonnes of imported soy used mainly as feed for chickens may have come from deforested areas of the Amazon.

The rise of mega-farms in the UK

Council Urged To Reject 'Mega-Farms' That House Hundreds Of Thousands Of Animals (1)

Norfolk already has 74 mega-farms, mainly poultry – more than any other county, according to a 2017 report by the Eastern Daily Press.

A mega-farm is the term used to for farms the equivalent size of a Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) in the US. A mega-farm has at least 125,000 chickens raised for meat, or 82,000 laying hens. A pig mega-farm has 2,500 or more animals, while its 700 for dairy cows and 1,000 for beef cows. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism revealed that there were at least 789 mega-farms as of 2017. Of these, 575 were for birds, 190 for pigs, 21 for dairy and three for beef.

Campaigners and researchers have called for a moratorium on granting planning permission to new intensive animal farms. They say that such farms have been allowed to proliferate without any consideration of their cumulative impacts.

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Council Urged To Reject 'Mega-Farms' That House Hundreds Of Thousands Of Animals (2024)

FAQs

Why are waste lagoons on hog farms a problem in NC? ›

Pig waste pits often leak or overflow, especially during strong storms and North Carolina's intense hurricane season. Pollution can lead to algal blooms — an overgrowth of algae that can produce toxins and deplete oxygen levels in waterways — as well as massive fish kills.

What is the problem with hogs in North Carolina? ›

With about two million hogs, the highest number of hogs in the United States, Duplin County in North Carolina is inundated with industrial hog operations and pollution from their waste pits and spraying of hog feces and urine onto fields.

Does North Carolina have a lot of pig farms? ›

North Carolina has two of the largest hog farms in the country, in Duplin and Sampson counties, with nearly 1.9 million and 1.8 million pigs, respectively.

How many animals are factory farmed in the US? ›

New data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) 2022 Census of Agriculture shows that 1.7 billion animals are currently being raised in U.S. factory farms every year – a 6 percent increase from 2016 and nearly a 50 percent increase from 20 years ago.

What is the problem with pig farming? ›

Waste from pig farms can carry pathogens, bacteria (often antibiotic resistant), and heavy metals that can be toxic when ingested. Pig waste also contributes to groundwater pollution in the forms of groundwater seepage and waste spray into neighboring areas with sprinklers.

What is the lawsuit against pig farms in NC? ›

A North Carolina federal judge recently sided with defendants Murphy-Brown and Smithfield Foods in granting their motion for summary judgement against nearly 20 plaintiffs that alleged trespass and negligence over hog waste spray, smells and flies from one of its Duplin County sites.

What state has the worst hog problem? ›

Texas: Texas has one of the largest feral hog populations in the United States, estimated to be in the millions. Florida: Florida also has a significant feral hog population, particularly in rural and wooded areas. They pose threats to native wildlife and ecosystems and are known to cause damage to crops and property.

What county in NC has the most feral hogs? ›

“Today, some of the bigger populations are in Johnston, Anson, Bladen, Columbus and Brunswick counties.” Wild hogs are prolific breeders and have been documented to have multiple litters per year.

Why are feral hogs killed? ›

They are a destructive, invasive species that causes extensive damage to natural ecosystems, croplands, pastures, livestock operations. The USDA estimates that feral swine are responsible for $2.5 billion in damage to U.S. agriculture annually.

What state is #1 in pig production? ›

Iowa is the top producer of hogs in the United States, with about $10.9 billion in cash receipts in 2022. Cash receipts represent the value of sales of hogs by farmers to processors or final users.

What is the no. 1 cash crop in Oklahoma? ›

Winter wheat is the most important crop in Oklahoma agriculture.

Which US state has the most pigs? ›

The U.S. state that produces the most pork is Iowa, and it's not even close. Nearly one-third of all pigs in the country·are raised in Iowa, and the state produced 14.3 billion pounds of pork in 2022. With a population of 3.16 million humans and 24.6 million pigs, there are almost eight pigs for every human in Iowa.

Are factory farms taking over? ›

Fewer family-scale dairy farms: As factory farms take over, the number of small dairies raising animals outside the factory farm system plummeted, with barely one-third as many today compared to twenty years ago. Meanwhile, the average number of cows on a mega-dairy operation now exceeds 2,000 head.

How are cows slaughtered? ›

After stunning, cows are hung by their legs on a pulley that moves them through the rest of the slaughter process. Their throats are cut and the major blood vessels in their neck are severed, and they die from blood loss — a method of killing called exsanguination.

How are cows slaughtered in America? ›

Technically, per slaughterhouse guidelines, large animals like cows, pigs, and sheep are supposed to be killed slowly by loss of blood, or exsanguination. Because the cruelty of this is self-evident, regulations also require animals be "stunned" before having their throats slit.

What are some problems with waste lagoons? ›

Lagoon effluent problems have a number of causes. The most common are: organic overloading and accompanying low dissolved oxygen conditions; short hydraulic detention time or short circuiting; algae or sulfur bacteria overgrowth; old sludge accumulation; and partial nitrification.

What are the negative side effects of a hog lagoon? ›

Those nutrients, however, are only beneficial in small doses. Too much can cause harmful algae bloom and fish kill. The lagoon and spray field system causes a horrid odor, and gives off ammonia, methane, and hydrogen sulfide fumes.

How are waste lagoons affecting North Carolina's water? ›

Hendrick said the report focuses on impacts to lagoons and overlooks "the significant pollution resulting from the runoff of their land applied waste." In North Carolina, Hurricane Floyd, Hurricane Matthew in 2016, and Hurricane Florence led to the failure of hundreds of waste lagoons, resulting in the contamination of ...

What causes waste lagoons on hog farms? ›

When a pig in a large-scale farm urinates or defecates, the waste falls through slatted floors into holding troughs below. Those troughs are periodically flushed into an earthen hole in the ground called a lagoon in a mixture of water, pig excrement and anaerobic bacteria.

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