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Gestation Crates For Pigs Phased Out By Pork Industry To Improve Treatment Of Animals

By STEVE KARNOWSKI 03/22/12 03:17 AM ET AP

MINNEAPOLIS -- As pork producers build new barns and retrofit old ones to give hogs more space, they say consumers opposed to keeping pregnant sows in tight cages can expect to pay for their clearer consciences with higher food prices.

Under pressure from animal rights activists and sensing a shift in consumer sentiment, several major pork producers have agreed to phase out gestation crates and switch to more open pens. Major pork buyer McDonald's Corp. recently announced its suppliers will have to stop using them as well.

"The McDonald's announcement was a tipping point in the debate about gestation stalls versus pens. ... That announcement has fundamentally changed the way people are looking at this debate," said Dennis Treacy, executive vice president and chief sustainability officer for Smithfield Foods Inc., the world's largest pork producer.

But the move to group pens requires building new barns and renovating old ones, more labor and more training for workers. Veterinary costs can go up because sows tend to fight and sometimes injure each other. Experts say at least some of those expenses are likely to be passed on in the price of ham, bacon, chops and sausage.

"We may as a society be in the process of deciding we're more than willing to pay those costs, but people ought to know what's involved in their decisions," said Blake Hurst, president of the Missouri Farm Bureau and a former hog farmer.

Smithfield had converted 30 percent of its company-owned farms by the end of December and is on track to meet its goal of switching all of them by 2017, Treacy said. A global food company with about $13 billion in annual sales, Smithfield expects the cost of switching to open pens to reach $300 million. Treacy said it's too early to tell how much of that would be passed along to consumers or absorbed by the company.

Putting open pens into existing barns cuts production because the buildings can't hold as many sows, said Dave Warner, spokesman for the National Pork Producers Council. But building bigger barns to accommodate group pens is expensive, and smaller producers who can't afford to retrofit existing barns could be forced out of business, further reducing supplies, he said.

Gestation crates typically measure about 2 feet by 7 feet, giving a sow that might weigh 400 to 600 pounds a space that's too narrow to turn around or even sleep on its side.

While animal welfare groups insist the stalls are cruel, the American Veterinary Medical Association and the American Association of Swine Veterinarians say science does not provide a clear-cut answer, and that there are advantages and disadvantages to both approaches.

One major reason producers switched to gestation crates is that sows in group pens tend to fight, leading to injuries and submissive sows losing out on food to more dominant animals.

Feeding systems exist that reduce competition for food by letting sows eat separately, and some pen designs let them take refuge from other hogs while still providing more freedom of movement. But it takes more work to monitor the animals for injuries, other health problems and whether they're getting enough food. And farm workers who enter group pens with sows that weigh several hundred pounds apiece have a higher risk of injury, making better training is essential.

Farm labor is expensive, and high-quality labor is even more expensive, said Brian Buhr, head of the applied economics department at the University of Minnesota. Even top quality operations making the switch experience steep learning curves, and what may seem like small cost increases per animal can add up to big expenses, he said.

Some pork producers are proud they've never used gestation crates. They include Paul Willis, who founded the pork operations of Niman Ranch Inc., which supplies restaurants and supermarkets with humanely raised pork. One major customer is Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., which drew national attention with an animated commercial about its commitment to humane farming that aired during the Feb. 12 Grammy Awards and featured singer Willie Nelson.

To be sure, Niman products usually cost more than mass-produced pork. A recent check at one Minneapolis-area supermarket found Niman pork chops and ham selling for $9.99 per pound, compared with $5.89 for regular pork chops and $6.29 for Hormel ham.

But Willis, who farms in Thornton, Iowa, said customers are willing to pay premium prices for the pork he and more than 500 other farmers raise according to Niman's standards.

"We think our system may be the best and most efficient in the long run for the animals, for the people, for the farmers and the environment," he said. "... Sometimes there's more to farming than just how much money you make."

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MINNEAPOLIS -- As pork producers build new barns and retrofit old ones to give hogs more space, they say consumers opposed to keeping pregnant sows in tight cages can expect to pay for their clearer c...
MINNEAPOLIS -- As pork producers build new barns and retrofit old ones to give hogs more space, they say consumers opposed to keeping pregnant sows in tight cages can expect to pay for their clearer c...
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jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
02:06 PM on 03/23/2012
peta also gives ten's of thousand's of dollar's too support anti aid's and anti ms and anti cancer research they bomb labs and even start fires wow that's your beloved peta bye by the way i'm a pet owner but no animal is ever going too come over my two nephews i'm sorry i'm for human being's millions of them starve every day on the street's of america and yet you veggie lover's don't care as long as you can get in your electric car and go too whole food's
jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
01:43 PM on 03/23/2012
i'm gonna get a lot of hate mail for this but i got sick of the pm's i got so yeah this is my finished rant on the matter bye just be choosy in what you all eat and if some one butt's in do what i do stare at them smile and walk away it's better too be the bigger person than be a whiny sniveling brat
jenniferkizzy
zombie chick
01:42 PM on 03/23/2012
the only reason vegan's want you too eat plant's is too lord it over some one else i bet you vegan's have never seen the late seventies horror movie called no blade of grass at the end of the movie a whole bunch of plant eater's find out the virus was genetically engineered too attack plant's and the people that eat them so in saying it jump's killing all life on earth including plant's and the animals that eat them so yeah check it out before you get on your moral high horse on the inter web's and especially the huff post
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:20 AM on 03/23/2012
So buy and eat less meat, we eat too much of it in this country anyway.

It's not rocket science.
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10:34 AM on 03/23/2012
I haven't eaten pork in nearly 5 years. Not enthusiastic about any other farmed animal meats either due to inhumane conditions and very unhealthy products.

I'm just thrilled to have our local Saturday Farmers Market so that we can pick up real eggs and real cheese from a local farm in Florida.
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
09:13 AM on 03/23/2012
the karma of a serving of meat:

if you take four ounces, you're gonna give four ounces.
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Dr Gachet
Long live utility.
08:47 PM on 03/22/2012
I like bacon as much as the next guy, but there is no need for inhumane conditions during the grow-up-and-get-delicious phase of the animals' lives.
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vtmilitia
Vermont ain't flat.
06:18 PM on 03/22/2012
Not mentioned in the article,some sows kill their piglets at birth and with a tight stall they cannot turn to grab the newborn piglets. Sounds cruel but it stops the sow.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
05:15 PM on 03/22/2012
Most of the meat-eaters I know are ok with higher prices. They understand that the beef and pork industries are government-subsidized and have a falsely low cost to consumers anyway. If meat cost the consumer what it truly should, Americans would eat a lot less of it, and be better off for it.
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
03:11 PM on 03/22/2012
Just one abuse in a whole system of abuses. I can't imagine the new system will be much better.

And the part about veterinary costs? Ha! Smithfield only has a handful of veterinarians for the millions of pigs they oversee. Pigs that get injured in fights (likely set off by crowded conditions, anxiety and pain) are most likely going to be left untreated or slowly dying.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
05:52 PM on 03/22/2012
After perusing the comments from all the sub-species expressing apathy and downright cruelty towards sentient beings, your remarks stand out as a voice of reason and compassion. I'm compelled to FAN you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThaGovna
I walk on water, eat bullets, and poop ice cream.
02:59 PM on 03/22/2012
I, for one, could care less how my food is treated before it's slaughtered.

I've seen how they are kept, and have even visited a slaughterhouse to see how they are eventually killed.

There are too many [humans] who don't receive humane treatment for me to worry about [animals] whose only purpose on a farm is to produce and/or be killed for food.

People should worry more about the chemicals they are pumping into our food than if the animals had a good life before we systematically slaughter and eat them.

If you really are concerned about it, and it's not because you think you get a better product when they are treated humanely, then you really should join an animal rights group and become a vegan.

Good life or not, we're still gonna end them.

30 year member of the real P.E.T.A.

People for Eating Tasty Animals
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
03:08 PM on 03/22/2012
Apathy rocks. Here's to animal cruelty!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThaGovna
I walk on water, eat bullets, and poop ice cream.
03:48 PM on 03/22/2012
So does logic, but you already knew that.
04:02 PM on 03/22/2012
ThaGovna--What a pathetic beast you must be! You're going to die one day, so why should anyone care how you're treated in this lifetime? Animals are innocent beings in all this and we need to treat them with compassion!
Now go live your miserable life--I can only hope others don't show compassion for you, when you need it!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThaGovna
I walk on water, eat bullets, and poop ice cream.
04:21 PM on 03/22/2012
Other humans do, but animals? I dunno. I'll say no. No animals show me compassion. I only have a cat my wife bought, but it and I aren't on speaking terms after pooping on my couch.

Be angry with the people who breed these animals for our food. You didn't think we just went out and captured innocent cows and pigs from the wild did you?

They are raised for food and/or profit.

Why can't anyone honestly tell me why anyone should care about these future food products that doesn't involve some sort of self righteousness and patting of themselves on the back?

We're in charge here (humans). What we're doing is sustainable (in regards to farmed animals). Keeping animals in small pens doesn't degrade my quality of life, and letting them roam "free" (still within the fence of course) doesn't improve my quality of life or anyone else's.
02:08 PM on 03/22/2012
"Dennis Treacy, executive vice president and chief sustainability officer for Smithfield Foods Inc.": that must be about the easiest job in the world. I'm guessing Dennis plays Angry Birds all day at work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alguien
02:05 PM on 03/22/2012
livestock that's raised humanely produces healthier and better tasting meat and i'm happy to pay more for that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hoosiergreen
Religious views? I've had them.
02:01 PM on 03/22/2012
It is absolutely worth the price for me.
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SallyMaclennane
Yes I did build that!
01:59 PM on 03/22/2012
So I assume it would be more humane if these animals were out in the wild being eaten alive by other animals?
02:09 PM on 03/22/2012
Boy, you're a real wisenheimer aren't you?
04:04 PM on 03/22/2012
Yes, it would be much more humane. They'd live a happy life, then have the short amount of time that predators attack them in which they suffer. At least it's nature at work, not humans instigating the suffering.
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SallyMaclennane
Yes I did build that!
08:55 AM on 03/23/2012
Humans aren't part of nature? You're funny. Guess you've also never been eaten alive either.