The Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) in the US has written to Mike Brown, president of the National Chicken Council (NCC), condemning the trade association’s new guidelines for the humane treatment of the 9 billion chickens raised for meat each year in the United States.
The NCC claims that their guidelines, as reported earlier, are based on scientific knowledge and the principle that chickens raised for food should be cared for in ways that prevent or minimize fear, pain, stress, and suffering, however, the AWI charges that the guidelines are based on commercial expedience and not animal welfare science.
“The revised guidelines fail to provide an acceptable level of welfare,” the organization said in a statement. “For example, the guidelines allow for near-continuous, dim lighting that facilitates feed consumption and weight gain but also causes leg abnormalities and eye problems. Confinement to a crowded and barren indoor environment prevents chickens from performing the most basic of natural behaviors, such as preening and flapping their wings, and also leads to high ammonia levels in the air and in the birds’ litter, which causes skin and respiratory ailments.
“As to the slaughter of chickens, the guidelines are not in compliance with several recommendations of the World Organization for Animal Health (known by its French acronym, “OIE”):
“The guidelines are not designed to ensure welfare but rather to facilitate the raising and slaughtering of as many birds as possible, in as short a time as possible,” said Dena Jones, AWI farm animal program manager. “We urge NCC to adopt the revisions described in our letter to provide these animals a better quality of life as well as a more humane death.”
Chickens raised for food in the United States have no federal legal protections against inhumane treatment on the farm or at the slaughterhouse. AWI, along with the animal advocacy organization Farm Sanctuary, recently petitioned the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) to enact regulations requiring humane handling of chickens at slaughter.
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