Farmers Aren't Euthanizing Animals. We are.
Dr. Sylvain Charlebois
Senior Director, Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University
"Milk dumped, euthanized animals, nightmares are everywhere in the countryside these days. Farmers, as responsible human beings, and are obviously sickened by what they need to do these days. Most of them have no choice and that is the problem. COVID-19 is essentially creating a strong case for the vegan movement and opponents of animal exploitation. As the social contract between the food industry and consumers is being redesigned, farmers and the rest of the industry will need to be ready."
Millions of liters of milk are being thrown away, more than 2 million eggs are eliminated from the food chain, and pigs and chickens are being euthanized. There is horror in the countryside. Throwing away good food when more than 4 million Canadians have lost their jobs is morally reprehensible, and farmers would be the first to admit it. Over the past few weeks, the public has been repeatedly told that COVID-19 has caused the backlog and disruptions of our food processing system. Yet only time will tell if consumers are willing to forgive the awful, ugly temporary failures of animal-based supply chains.
It was reported that 200,000 chickens had to be euthanized in recent days. Last week, Bloomberg disclosed that more than 90,000 pigs had to be culled and discarded in Canada. A few weeks ago, millions of liters of milk were thrown into the sewers. While it is hard to know what is really going on in the countryside, far from cities and fact-finding eyes, it is a safe bet that the numbers obtained by our hard-working journalists are understated. The situation is distributing and frankly embarrassing for everyone, beginning with the farmers.
Farmers and other agricultural pundits have tried to explain their actions. The food service sector being idle and abattoirs temporally closing are the arguments most often used. The different groups representing the farmers inform us that they have no other choice, almost asking for forgiveness. They also claim that it is happening elsewhere around the world. True, alternatives are practically nonexistent, but this points to a much larger issue we have in the agrifood sector.
First, supply management exists in Canada, and only in Canada, to avoid waste at farmgate. Special permits are required in Canada, sanctioned by governments to produce milk, eggs and poultry, to meet domestic demand. These sectors are waste-immune, or at least, they are supposed to be. While it is a good system, for the most part, it nonetheless has its flaws, and COVID-19 is highlighting its ugly side. Revenues allocated to producers are set according to production costs, as well as losses. In the long run, due to the well-regimented quota system, consumers will pay for the milk and the eggs that are discarded, as well as for the euthanized chickens. Marketing boards, however, will often deny it, deceiving an overly uneducated public about agriculture. It is supply management’s inconvenient truth. Waste on the farm is a recurring issue and not just this year. What is different this year is the unprecedented volume. Despite what may have been conveyed to the public, supply-managed farms cannot lose money, period. Losses are pooled over the year, but pricing formulas will eventually allow all farms to make a decent profit over time. It is the law.
There are little to no incentives to find alternative solutions to reduce waste at farmgate. Milk, eggs, and chicken are, for all intent and purpose, public goods. Milk production is even partially subsidized now in Canada by taxpayers, $1.8b over 8 years and more is likely on the way. It should be illegal to eliminate these products from the food chain without redirecting these products and give them a new economic purpose. These products could add to a larger strategic reserve for international markets, producing biofuels, making other food products such as vodka, there are a multitude of options. For milk, there are existing technologies to help preserve milk for up to a year. A good example of this is Milk Grand Pré, in Terrebonne, Quebec, which uses the UHT processing method.
For other commodities, it is different, very different. For example, if a hog farm opts to euthanize its flock, however immoral, it would do it at its own expense. The same goes for beef. Mushrooms, potatoes, and most other commodities, producers suffer losses. Incentives for these industries to avoid losses are real. But wasting food on farms does put an emphasis on the very fragile state of our social contract with the food industry. It is simply wrong, regardless of circumstances. But, as consumers, we have the food industry we deserve. Our industry’s architecture points to what consumers have wanted for decades, which is cheap food. Many are outraged by what’s happening, but simply accepting such outcomes is no longer enough, especially today in the midst of COVID-19.
Farmers are not the only one responsible. The biggest challenge remains food processing in Canada. The key to deal with surpluses is more vertical coordination. Farmers need to work with processors to avoid waste and senseless animal killings. Better vertical coordination is possible if a strategy exists. Most sectors have never seriously given much thought to how to make a value chain work, beyond giving generously to food banks.
Ottawa’s move to boost the Canadian Dairy Commission's credit last week by $200 million was a good move. This will, hopefully, help our crown corporation to develop new mechanisms to better manage surpluses in the future.
One thing is certain, the pandemic is serving strong case studies on a silver platter to the vegan movement and opponents of animal exploitation. Due to the destruction of food sources, some analysts claim that the capitalization of Beyond Meat could exceed that of Amazon or even Facebook within 5 years. While there is uncertainty that this scenario is plausible, the impact of COVID-19 is forever a part of our lives. For farmers and others, asking forgiveness after COVID-19 may not be easy.
Advisor, Mentor, Author, Speaker
4 年It is not clear that the pandemic is going to reduce demand for animal protein or not - too early to say with certainty. However, will it force some of those operations to close? Perhaps. Will they be replaced with more 'animal-friendly' models? I wouldn't count on it.
Chargé de projet Viens courir, le Secteur course sur route et en sentier d’Athlétisme Québec
4 年This is a food waste issue. Food waste is unacceptable, from farm to fridge. Everybody should feel concerned. Coronavirus crisis causes million of pounds of food waste. You dont explain to the reader why coronavirus causes exceptionnal food waste. NY Times does. NY Times' title : Food waste of the pandemic, with a picture of a tractor mulches green beans at an R.C. Hatton farm in Florida. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/11/business/coronavirus-destroying-food.html Is there a reason why you are focussing more on animal productions waste? Sylvain, you are doing great work in medias. But on this one, you are not doing a proper presentation of the context and mixing issues. By doing so, you are misleading the readers. They will remember only that farmers kill their animals without understanding the exceptionnal situation of the covid crisis. I Still do not understand why you try to make it an animal welfare issue and insist on the vegan activists in the loop. Is it your way to get more readers? Mixing issues serves no one. If you want to talk about animal welfare, write about it and present your position clearly.
Independent Legal Consultant (Self-employed)
4 年Go vegan! Animals are here with us,not for us! Stop killing these innocents creatures ,sentient beings!
Rancher/Professional Agrologist/Grassland Conservation Advocate ….grass is the forgiveness of nature, her constant benediction…..
4 年Game on #opportunity?