New Meat
Byproducts: Avian Flu and Global Climate Change
Worldwatch
Institute – February 19, 2007 – 9:15am
San Francisco—The growth of factory farms, their proximity to
congested cities in the developing world, and the globalized
poultry trade are all culprits behind the spread of avian flu,
while livestock wastes damage the climate at a rate that surpasses
emissions from cars and SUVs. These preliminary findings on avian
flu and meat production, from the upcoming Worldwatch Institute
report Vital Signs 2007–2008, were released today by research
associate Danielle Nierenberg at the annual conference of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San
Francisco.
At least 15 nations have restricted or banned free-range and
backyard production of birds in an attempt to deal with avian flu
on the ground, a move that may ultimately do more harm than good,
according to Nierenberg. “Many of the world’s estimated 800 million
urban farmers, who raise crops and animals for food,
transportation, and income in back yards and on rooftops, have been
targeted unfairly by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) and the World Health Organization,” she told participants at
the AAAS event. “The socioeconomic importance of livestock to the
world’s poor cannot be overstated.”
In 2006, global meat production increased 2.5 percent to an
estimated 276 million tons. Sixty percent of this production
occurred in the developing world, where half of all meat is now
consumed thanks to rising incomes and exploding urbanization.
Rising demand for meat has helped drive livestock production away
from rural, mixed-farming systems, where farmers raise a few
different species on a grass diet, toward intensive periurban and
urban production of pigs and chickens. Because of unregulated
zoning and subsidies that encourage livestock production, chicken
and pig “confined animal feedlot operations” (CAFOs), or factory
farms, are moving closer to major urban areas in China, Bangladesh,
India, and many countries in Africa.
Locating large chicken farms near cities might make economic sense,
but the close concentration of the birds to densely populated areas
can help foster and spread disease, Nierenberg says. In Laos, 42 of
the 45 outbreaks of avian flu in the spring of 2004 occurred on
factory farms, and 38 were in the capital, Vientiane (the few small
farms in the city where outbreaks occurred were located close to
commercial operations). In Nigeria, the first cases of avian flu
were found in an industrial broiler operation; it spread from that
46,000-bird farm to 30 other factory farms, then quickly to
neighboring backyard flocks, forcing already-poor farmers to kill
their chickens.
Due mainly to the spread of avian flu and the culling of birds,
global poultry output rose only slightly in 2006 to approximately
83 million tons, roughly a 1-percent decrease from the preceding
year. Pig meat production, however, grew by 3 percent to 108
million tons, an increase likely due to shifting consumption in
Asia from chicken to pork due to concerns about avian flu.
Avian flu has existed among backyard flocks for centuries, but has
never been found to evolve there into highly pathogenic forms such
as the deadly H5N1 virus. In CAFOs, in contrast, where animals are
concentrated by the thousands, diseases erupt and spread quickly.
Trade in poultry from these operations is a culprit in spreading
the disease to smallholder farmers.
Experts suggest that rather than culling smaller, backyard flocks,
the FAO, WHO, and other international agencies should focus the
bulk of their avian flu prevention efforts on large poultry
producers and on stopping disease outbreaks before they occur. The
industrial food system not only threatens the livelihoods of small
farmers, it potentially puts the world at risk for a potential flu
pandemic. “While H5N1…may have been a product of the world’s
factory farms, it’s small producers who have the most to lose,”
says Nierenberg.
Intensive animal farming is not only deleterious to human health
and economies; it is also responsible for a great deal of
ecological destruction. The growing numbers of livestock are
responsible for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions (as
measured in carbon dioxide equivalent). They account for 37 percent
of emissions of methane, which has more than 20 times the global
warming potential of carbon dioxide, and 65 percent of emissions of
nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, most of which comes
from manure.