Factory farming endangers the natural world, threatening the survival of many animals and plants.
We rely on the health of ecosystems for our general wellbeing - they provide our food, our water, even our air1. In 1997, a group of scientists stated that the services provided by our ecosystems, if properly valued, would be worth around US$33 trillion every year2. Despite this, the survival of countless plant and animal species around the world is currently threatened3. While there is a range of factors driving this extinction crisis, a critical component is factory farming.
Toxic outputs
Factory farming can create a range of pollution problems, fragmenting and even destroying natural habitats. This can drive out or even kill the animals and plants that inhabit them. The range of wastes from factory farms can be particularly problematic, leaking into water courses and, in the worst cases, leaving vast "dead zones", where few species can survive. Some of the nitrogen will also become gaseous, turning into ammonia, for instance, which creates problems such as water acidification and ozone layer depletion.
169 marine areas have been identified as "dead zones" as of 2008 - up from 44 in 1995. One of the largest, found in the Gulf of Mexico, was estimated in 2002 to be the size of Massachusetts - 22000 square kilometers.
World Resources Institute (WRI) (2008)4
The rush for land
The deliberate destruction of natural habitats is also a significant driver of biodiversity loss. Because the farm animals need to eat so much, we need a lot of land to grow the feed. In fact, around one third of the world's crop lands are already given over to growing animal feed5. Unfortunately, because space for crops is already at a premium, we are seeing a push for land in parts of Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, including environmentally valuable grasslands and forests. Between 1980 and 2000, an area over 25 times the size of the UK was created in the developing world for new farmland - over 10% of this was at the expense of existing tropical forests. The scientists who discovered this concluded that intensive agriculture, rather than family farms, was the dominant driver6. The problem isn't just limited to tropical regions though; increasing pressure on crop lands around Europe, for example, is leading to the disappearance of a wide variety of plants and animals7.
Current trends suggest that agricultural expansion in the Amazon for grazing and crops will see 40% of this fragile, pristine rainforest destroyed by 2050.
Nature (2006)8
A changing climate
As covered in our climate change section, factory farming produces substantial greenhouse gas emissions - 18% of our total emissions in fact, which is more than the global transport sector9. These emissions are intensifying climate change and making certain habitats increasingly hostile to live in. According to the Convention on Biological Diversity10, climate change may affect plant growth and production by promoting the spread of pests and diseases, increasing exposure to heat stress and changing rainfall patterns, and encouraging soil erosion due to stronger winds.
One in 10 species could face extinction by the year 2100 if current predicted climate change impacts continue.
National Academy of Sciences (2010)11
But don't just take our word for it
Factory farming endangers the survival of other animals and plants, with impacts including pollution, deforestation and climate change.
UNFAO (2006)12
Expanding and intensifying agriculture [leads to] habitat destruction, degradation and fragmentation.
Birdlife International (2011)13
Biodiversity contributes…to many constituents of human well-being, including security, basic material for a good life, health, good social relations, and freedom of choice and action... [L]osses in biodiversity…have caused some people to experience declining well-being, with poverty in some social groups being exacerbated.
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) (2005)14
So what?
Factory farming endangers the natural world. By taking action against factory farming, we are also helping to preserve valuable ecosystems and the animals and plants that inhabit them.
How a pristine wilderness is being destroyed for animal feed

The Brazilian Cerrado - a vast area of savannah extending over 20% of the country - is a valuable and unique wilderness. It plays host to a dizzying array of weird and wonderful creatures, including the giant anteater, the maned-wolf and the pampas deer. And there are more than 4000 plant species here that exist no-where else on earth1. But this fragile habitat is being systematically destroyed; cut up to make way for the soya crops that will feed factory farmed animals. The animals and plants of the Cerrado are bearing one of the true costs of factory farming.
'The Cerrado consists of open grasslands, grasslands mixed with shrubs and small trees, and dry-forest woodlands… Jaguars, giant anteaters, maned wolves, foxes, pampas deer, tapirs, capybaras, and monkeys live in the Cerrado, as do nearly 200 other mammals, 600 bird species, 220 reptiles, and more than 10,000 plant species... The Cerrado is the most biologically diverse savanna on Earth.'
Huffington Post, 20092
'[T]his vast wilderness - as big as the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain put together - is being rapidly lost to feed the heavily carnivorous appetites of Britons and others. What was, only a generation ago, an almost unbroken two million square kilometre mass of trees and bushes in central Brazil is now covered with fields of soy beans, waiting to be fed to pigs and chickens in Europe and China… Overall, annual deforestation of the Amazon has slowed to 0.18 per cent. The vast majority of the rainforest is still standing, 83 per cent, and 25 per cent is officially protected. The position in the Cerrado is almost the opposite - only 20 per cent of pristine land is intact and only 8 per cent is officially protected.'
The Independent, 20113
Our sources
- Conservation International, 2007, Biodiversity Hotspots
- The Huffington Post, 2009, The Importance of Being Cerrado: Brazil's Other Huge, Endangered Ecosystem
- The Independent, 2011, Britain's Taste for Cheap Food that's Killing Brazil's 'Other Wilderness'
Huge thanks to RonanW for the image (cc)
Our sources
- Defra (2011), Ecosystems Services
- Nature (1997), The Value of the World's Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital
- IUCN (2008), Wildlife in a Changing World, An analysis of the 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™
- WRI (2008), Eutrophication and Hypoxia in Coastal Areas: A Global Assessment of the State of Knowledge
- UNFAO (2006), Lifestock's Long Shadow
- PNAS (2010), Tropical Forests Were the Primary Sources of New Agricultural Land in the 1980s and 1990s
- Birdlife International (2011), Agriculture in Biodiversity in the EU
- Nature (2006), Modelling Conservation in the Amazon Basin
- UNFAO (2006), Livestock's Long Shadow
- CBD (2007), Biodiversity and Climate Change
- National Academy of Sciences (2010), Recent Ecological Responses to Climate Change Support Predictions of High Extinction Risk
- UNFAO (2006), Livestock's Long Shadow
- Birdlife International (2011), Human Actions are Putting Pressure on Species, Sites and Habitats
- MEA (2005), Ecosystems and Human Wellbeing
Huge thanks to RonanW for the image (cc)