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Factory farming is everywhere - around 2 in every 3 farm animals are factory farmed. But it doesn't work - it's dangerous, unfair and dirty.

Raw is a campaign to kickstart a food and farming revolution. We are exposing the raw truths of factory farming and building a movement for better food and farming. Sign up to Raw and help expose the true cost of factory farming. Together, let's kickstart a food and farming revolution.

compassion logoRaw is brought to you by Compassion in World Farming. The organisation was founded over 40 years ago by a British farmer who became horrified by the development of modern, intensive factory farming. Find out more about Compassion.

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Feeding the world sustainably in the 'future we want'

News & analysis

Rio+20

20 years after the first Earth Summit in Rio, world leaders, policy makers, governments and NGOs have met again in Brazil’s capital to try to set the world on a more sustainable path.

The UN called it a "historic opportunity" to agree tangible measures to "reduce poverty, advance social equity and ensure environmental protection on an ever more crowded planet."1

It’s the final day and the media are reporting widespread criticism of the agreement due to be signed, named 'The future we want'.  NGO leaders have expressed their disappointment in the lack of ambition and commitment to real action.2 Civil rights groups have called it a "betrayal of future generations".3

Nevertheless, this week has focused minds around the world on the question 'What future do we want?'  And the organizers of Rio+20 have asked us all to join the 'global conversation' by contributing ideas and practical solutions from around the world.

Factory farming isn’t sustainable

Re-thinking how we 'grow, share and consume our food' is one of the critical goals of Rio+20. The Rio+20 website states:

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A profound change of the global food and agriculture system is needed if we are to nourish today's 925 million hungry and the additional 2 billion people expected by 2050.4

Our current system of livestock farming is predominantly based on factory farming, which prioritises maximum production above all else. Animals are treated as commodities and are often raised in intense confinement.  Factory Farming is highly dependent on large quantities of limited resources such as grain-based feed, water, energy and medication. This type of farming is inherently unsustainable because of the negative impacts on animals, people and the planet.

The future we want: a vision for Food Sense

Compassion in World Farming’s CEO, Philip Lymbery has called for a common-sense approach to farming and food production. In his 'Food Sense' briefing, he shows how we could revolutionise our food system to become more effective at making food available to people. Ultimately, farm animals must be kept in ways that add to the world’s food supply, rather than competing with people for food and resources.

Here are some practical guiding principles for the future:

  • Get animals off grain-based feed
    Approximately one third of the world’s cereal harvest is fed to farm animals. If this were fed to people, it could feed 3 billion people. Animals such as cattle and sheep can eat plants and grass that people can’t eat and pigs and poultry would happily forage and recycle food waste. Getting  animals off the high grain diet of intensive farming systems, and onto grass and other foods which people can’t eat, will stop them from competing with humans for food.
  • Fish for people, not livestock
    Up to a third of the fish brought to market worldwide is not consumed directly by people. It is used mostly as feed for farmed fish and other livestock. Ending the practice would take pressure off our often overexploited seas.
  • Avoiding over-eating meat
    Most people in the west eat more animal fat and protein than they need, often contributing to life threatening diseases. Ensuring a balanced approach to eating resource-intensive meat, dairy and eggs would help reduce the high environmental impact of animal farming and improve human health.
  • Stop wasting food and resources
    Globally, about one third of food produced is lost or wasted. In industrialised nations, more is wasted in the home than on the farm and in less industrialised nations, more is lost in the field due to a lack of basic equipment. Reducing food waste in storing, manufacturing, distributing and consuming food would free up much of what is needed for a growing population. It would also make better use of the resources that went into making it; land, oil, water and the inevitable greenhouse gas emissions. For example, the irrigation water used to grow the world’s wasted food would satisfy the domestic needs of 9 billion people.5

Rio+20 was an opportunity to focus minds on one of the most important challenges of our time - how to feed a growing world population at a time of shrinking resources, and with an environmental foundation which is already damaged. World leaders may not have delivered the concrete agreements we needed this week, but, as individuals and as members of society, we can play our part too. We can each transform our lives to be more sustainable, and we can work together, through movements like RAW, for real change in our food and farming systems, to actually deliver the future we want.

 

Our sources

  1. www.un.org (2012), What is "Rio+20"?
  2. Guardian (2012), Rio+20 politicians deliver 'new definition of hypocrisy' claim NGOs
  3. BBC News (2012), Criticism and discord mark Rio summit end
  4. www.un.org (2012), 7 Critical Issues at Rio+20
  5. Stuart, T. (2009) Waste
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