Credit: We Animals Media
Young broiler chickens huddled together in a factory farm

The reality of chicken farming: short, painful lives.

They live only a few weeks, and those weeks are full of suffering. Find out why farming chickens for meat is one of the biggest animal welfare issues in Australia and the world today.

Animals Australia

Animals Australia team

Last updated October 15, 2020

A chicken can be just 5 weeks old when he is killed for his meat, but he’ll have the body of an adult bird and many of the ailments that come with it. This unnatural growth rate is the result of decades of selective breeding that has put industry profits ahead of the wellbeing of animals.

In commercial chicken farming, the chickens have just one ‘job’ — to gain weight. And everything — from the conditions they’re kept in, to selective breeding over generations — has been carefully manufactured to create a business model where chickens become as ‘meaty’ as possible, as quickly as possible.

The consequences of this rapid and unnatural growth are dire for many birds. As their bodies grow too quickly, walking and even standing can become difficult due to lameness or dislocated joints.

Modern chickens are effectively born into a genetic prison. Their bodies are their cages. Their health and welfare are so compromised that their likelihood of survival (or not) is built into the economics of running a chicken farm.

The industry anticipates that 4% — or 26 million chickens annually — won’t even survive long enough to reach slaughter weight.

A life of deprivation.

The sheds where chickens will live out their short, painful lives provide no space or enrichment to enable natural behaviours such as perching, or cleaning feathers by dust-bathing. Sheds typically hold around 40,000 chickens and industry standards allow birds to be kept at approximately 20 birds per square metre (about the size of an Ipad each).

Carefully manipulated lighting makes it nearly impossible for the birds to properly rest. That’s because it’s often not dark for very long — but it’s not very light either. The dim light is meant to keep chickens docile, as too much movement will exercise off their ‘meat’. But sleep isn’t ‘desirable’ either, because that’s valuable time chickens should be eating and putting on more weight.

Incredibly, even in the updated welfare standards for chickens, there is still no requirement to provide birds with an appropriate amount of time in continuous darkness.

A perfect storm of cruelty.

It’s fair to conclude that this modern phenomenon of ‘cheap chicken’ has come at an enormous cost to the welfare of the birds. And not only those raised for their meat.

Research has found that the parents of these chickens — called ‘breeding stock’ — live in a state of chronic stress. That’s because they’ve been genetically selected to always be hungry, but laws allow them to be fed only every second day.

‘Skip-a-day feeding’ is an industry practice to extend the life and reproductive capacity of an animal whose body is a ‘ticking time bomb’ — and not designed to last for very long. Even ‘meat’ chickens rescued from factory farms will rarely survive beyond a year.

Standard factory farm conditions and selective breeding have combined to create the perfect storm of animal cruelty. But this method of farming chickens also presents a risk to human health. Disease is so common that many farms dose the water supply with antibiotics, risking the creation of antibiotic-resistant ‘superbugs’.

The volume of antibiotics used in animals is continuing to increase worldwide, driven by a growing demand for foods of animal origin...often produced through intensive animal husbandry.
Dr Kazuaki Miyagishima
World Health Organization

Dr. Miyagishima continues: ” Scientific evidence demonstrates that overuse of antibiotics in animals can contribute to the emergence of antibiotic resistance.”

What about free range?

While birds in free range systems may be provided with more space and enrichment, they are often still the same fast-growing breed with all the associated ailments and will still spend most of their life inside.

That’s because such young birds cannot regulate their body temperature so they must be ‘fully feathered’ before they go outdoors — usually at around 3 weeks old. But as they will be killed between 4 and 6 weeks old, ‘free range’ chickens may only have access to the outside world for a couple of weeks of their life.

Ultimately, both ‘factory farmed’ and ‘free-range’ animals are trucked to the same slaughterhouses — and for chickens killed for their meat, this process is particularly terrifying.

There’s a kinder choice.

In terms of suffering, and sheer numbers, chickens killed for meat represent one of the biggest animal welfare issues in the world today. These animals have been born only to suffer. But it doesn’t have to be this way.

Factory farming only exists because so many animals are being eaten. Every time you swap an animal-based meal for a plant-based one you are helping reduce the demand for animal products that has underpinned these systems of suffering.

And the great news is, it’s never been easier to enjoy more plant-based (and chicken-friendly!) meals. For tips, inspiration and mouth-watering recipes head to VegKit.com or download your Free Veg Starter Guide today.

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REFERENCES

[1] Hartcher KM & Lum HK. (2020) Genetic selection of broilers and welfare consequences: a review. World’s Poultry Science Journal76(1): 154-167.

[2] Taylor PS, Hemsworth PH, Groves PJ, Gebhardt-Henrich S & Rault JL. (2017) Ranging behaviour of commercial free-range broiler chickens 1: Factors related to flock variability. Animals7: 54. Doi:10.3390/ani7070054

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