“Cracks appear for factory farming ”
A decision by McDonald's and Woolworths to increase free-range egg use spells doom for animal-cruelty offenders, Ondine Sherman writes.
The views expressed in this opinion piece do not necessarily reflect the views of Animals Australia.
In years
to come, intensive "factory" farmers may look back on Friday, August
14, as the day that marked the beginning of their downward spiral and
eventual demise.
Woolworths' decision to reduce its product
lines of battery eggs and to replace them with barn-laid and free-range
eggs was announced on Friday, followed shortly by the McDonald's
resolution, reported on Sunday, to move its Australian operation
towards using free-range eggs.
These small steps might seem
insignificant. However, together, they signal a seismic shift in
Australia's attitude to animal welfare.
Since the start of the
Australian animal protection movement in the late 1970s (with Peter
Singer's groundbreaking book Animal Liberation), advocates have been
campaigning to get hens out of cages.
Now, 30 years later, the
understanding has finally developed that these sentient animals are
indeed suffering in their confinement.
Today, it seems that more
Australians know about the plight of caged hens than any other farm
animal welfare issue (eg pregnant pigs confined in crates, cutting
piglets' tails off without pain relief etc).
The increased
awareness of the cruelty inherent in battery-egg production has led to
a growing demand for barn-laid, organic and free-range eggs.
In
recent years "free-range" has become a mainstream concept and
increasingly fashionable for Sydney's cafes that proudly advertise
their guilt-free egg benedicts at Sunday brunch.
Slowly, animal
advocates are seeing the results of their labour. In the past two
years, the University of Newcastle has gone "cage-free" and all ACT
government agencies (including hospitals, correctional facilities, CIT
campuses and schools) have committed to using barn-laid or free-range
eggs.
While these are important steps, when we look to Europe
and the US, we discover that Australia is no world leader in animal
welfare.
Major retailers and governments overseas have taken giant steps towards a total rejection of caged eggs.
In
Britain, two of the four major supermarkets will not sell eggs from
caged hens after 2010 and almost all of the McDonald's British eggs now
come from free-range chickens (with a commitment to use 100 per cent
cage-free birds by 2010).
Last year, nearly 350 US universities,
including Harvard and Princeton, had policies either to eliminate or to
reduce their use of battery eggs.
Burger King continues to
reduce its usage of eggs from battery hens (as well as other caged
animal products) and the North American component of Compass Group, the
world's largest food service provider, now only uses cage-free eggs in
its meal production.
Conventional battery cages are being phased out in the EU, with a total ban by 2012.
All
cage systems are already prohibited in Switzerland with Sweden,
Finland, Norway, Germany and Austria all banning or phasing them out.
While governments internationally are taking leadership, the Australian Government has been moving backwards.
By
encouraging factory farmers to invest large funds into making cages
fractionally bigger (the space allocated per hen recently increased
from 450 square centimetres to 550 square centimetres), they are
ensuring that the caged system will be entrenched in Australian farms
for many years to come.
The decision by Woolworths and
McDonald's might seem small and safe to those of us who reject cruelty
for profit but, as a famous saying goes, "A journey of 1000 miles must
begin with a single step."
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Australian laws are failing to protect some 500 million animals in factory farms from acts of cruelty. Their future is in our hands.
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