What does cage-free mean?
The term may bring to mind happy chickens roaming free in a rolling
green field, their lush feathers glistening in the ample sunlight.
Well, here comes a vegan to rain on your chicken paradise parade...
(It's me...I'm the vegan...)
(music, bird song, animal noises and the soft buzzing of bees)
Hi, it's Emily from BiteSizeVegan.org, where you can
find free resources, eCourses, kids' content,
and a Guided Search to help you find just what
you need, even if you don't know what to ask!
Speaking of eCourses, this video has one of its very own,
so you can test your knowledge after watching!
For those of you watching this on BiteSizeVegan.org
—first of all, you're awesome
—just click the "take the eCourse now" button.
For those of you watching elsewhere, just head over to
BiteSizeVegan.org/CageFree
where you will also find all of the sources for this video
(and there are a lot... Cause I'm a nerd)
Before diving into the meaning of cage-free eggs, it's important to acknowledge
that the vast majority of the world's almost 8 billion
layer hens are still kept in battery cages
—one of the most intensive forms of confinement in the animal products industry.
Crammed together in these small, barren cages, each
individual hen is afforded less space than a single sheet of paper
—unable to extend their wings or even stand fully upright.
Denied the ability to engage in natural behaviors such as
foraging, wing-flapping, perching, dust bathing, and nesting,
hens in battery cages experience extreme distress—
manifesting in neurotic behavior, feather loss, aggression, and even cannibalism.
These hens live in constant pain,
often suffering from osteoporosis due to the combination of nutrient loss
from high egg production and a severe lack of movement.
Rising public concern over the last four decades regarding the horrific conditions
of battery cages has led to increasing demands for alternative systems.
Now, a total ban on battery cages sounds like a
huge move in the right direction, right?
Well, In 1999, The Council of the European Union set a directive
that banned all “barren battery cages” by 2012.
While media coverage at the time focused on the end of battery cages in the EU,
what the directive actually did was replace barren battery cages with
“enriched"—meaning furnished—battery cages.
Yes, hens would now be provided more space and given
furnishings like perches and laying nests
—certainly an improvement over barren cages.
However, while reports extolled that hens would now each be afforded 750cm²,
rather than the 550 cm² in conventional battery cages,
they neglected to clarify that—due to the new furnishings
—only 600cm² would be usable.
Meaning—in the end—that this revolutionary
step forward for the rights of laying hens
granted them less than a single playing card
of additional space.
Even more maddening: in 2012, over twelve years after the directive,
thirteen Member States had still failed to comply with the ban.
The 1999 Council Directive addressed more than an eventual end
to barren battery cages in favor of enriched cages
—it also introduced a third category, termed "alternative systems."
This umbrella term covered various non-cage systems, such as aviaries
and barns—including what we commonly refer to as "cage-free eggs."
So, what, exactly, does cage-free mean?
In the simplest terms, cage-free means exactly what it sounds like:
laying hens are never caged. But the simplicity ends there.
As the term "cage-free" primarily defines how hens are not to be housed,
the actual conditions under which cage-free hens are housed varies greatly;
standards are largely unspecified, unverified and unregulated.
In the U.S., the United Stated Department of Agriculture (USDA)
only specifies that cage-free eggs
"must be produced by hens housed in a building, room or enclosure
that allows for unlimited access to food and water
and provides the freedom to roam the area during the laying cycle."
Cage-free eggs graded by the USDA are subject to on-site inspections
twice a year, purely to ensure the hens are not in cages.
Additionally, not all cage-free eggs are graded by the USDA,
so many cage-free labels do not have any verification
at all that the hens they came from were not caged.
In the European Union, while the term "cage-free"
doesn't seem to be widely used,
non-cage systems are required to "not exceed
9 laying hens per m² usable area."
This affords each hen a little over a square foot of space.
There are no such stocking density limits in the United States, among other countries.
The separation between cage and non-cage farming is often completely non-existent:
many egg producers have both caged and cage-free facilities on the same property.
Purchasing cage-free eggs is in no way supporting smaller, independent farmers.
That said, there is no denying that almost anything would be
an improvement over life in a battery cage.
However, as we've learned with "enriched" cages, alternative systems
aren't the idyllic environments we may envision.
Cage-free hens are kept indoors, usually in windowless buildings.
Each structure may contain thousands to tens of thousands of birds.
This extreme overcrowding leaves some cage-free hens without much more room than battery cages, resulting in many of the same mental and physical consequences.
Additionally, cage-free hens are not spared the cruel
"standard practices" of the egg industry as a whole.
All hens are sourced from hatcheries where male chicks are killed upon hatching.
The primary method recommended by the European Union's humane
regulations, and implemented worldwide, is "maceration"
—a euphemistic term for dropping newborn male chicks
into a meat grinder while alive.
It's estimated that 3.2 billion male chicks are killed every year.
Cage-free hens are still subjected to debeaking —a painful mutilation
in which a portion of their sensitive beaks are cut or burned off.
In the few countries where debeaking is banned, hens face increased mortality rates from aggressive pecking brought on by crowded and stressful living conditions.
The living beings within all animal product industries
are viewed as just that—products.
Laying hens are no different—everything from their environment to their
very genetics are engineered for maximum egg output.
Artificial lighting is used to constantly manipulate hens'
hormones in order to increase their egg production.
One of the most cruel practices within the
egg industry is what's referred to as "induced molting."
Farmers remove the hens’ food for weeks, literally starving them.
The hens lose up to 35% of their body weight, along
with their feathers, allowing their reproductive tracts to “refresh”
so they can pump out another round of eggs.
They are also subjected to more extreme forms of light manipulation,
at times enduring a week of constant light.
There is nothing within the cage-free label that prohibits this barbaric practice.
While forced molting is banned in some countries,
this simply means the hens are slaughtered after they are no longer profitable
—a fate which awaits every layer hen.
No matter the label, housing conditions or country, all
layer hens are killed when their egg production declines
—typically when they are 70-80 weeks old. No longer able to turn a profit,
they are sent to their deaths—still mere babies themselves.
In caged systems, hens can be more effectively separated from their waste.
In cage-free systems, the ammonia from their waste can cause
dangerous conditions for the hens, workers, and the public.
A study looking into the sources of particulate pollution found the
poultry industry to be the greatest single contributor.
The ammonia in poultry litter "combines with other pollutants—
sulfur dioxide and nitrous oxide...to produce a secondary source of
additional deadly [fine particulate matter]."
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has estimated that this
kind of fine particulate matter (PM 2.5)
"is responsible for over 90% of air pollution-related health damages."
A large-scale study by the Coalition for Sustainable Egg Supply
(CSES) research project
found the mortality rate (meaning death rate) in non-cage
systems to be 2.5 times higher than in battery cage systems.
This finding was far from isolated to one study or country.
The primary causes of increased mortality in non-cage systems include:
injurious pecking, cannibalism, and disease transference.
These very issues are a large part of why battery cages were invented in the first place
—confining hens in cages makes it much easier to manage behavioral
issues and disease outbreaks.
Pointing to the housing system as the reason for more deaths, is an
oversimplification of what is a very complex issue.
A meta-analysis of data from 29 sources covering commercial farms in 16 countries
indicates a possible decline in mortality rates within
non-cage systems in more recent years.
The authors argue that this decline will continue as producers become
more familiar with managing non-cage systems,
and as more "appropriate" hen breeds are created and utilized.
They also emphasize are created and utilized. the importance of debeaking
hens to reduce injurious and cannibalistic behavior.
At first glance, this decline in mortality rates in non-cage systems
may sound like a promising trend.
Yet, rather than pointing to reasons for hope, the proposed causes of the decline actually highlight a stark reality:
within the animal products industries, the solutions are the problems.
When hens injure and kill one another due to their breeding and living conditions
—both of which have been imposed upon them—
the solution is to cut off their beaks and alter their breeding.
Ian J.H. Duncan, Professor Emeritus and Emeritus Chair in Animal Welfare at the University of Guelph, Canada, illustrates this predicament, saying:
"If [producers] do not trim beaks, then feather
pecking and cannibalism may cause enormous suffering.
If they do trim beaks by conventional methods,
the birds will suffer from acute and chronic pain...
Chopping off parts of young animals in order to prevent future
welfare problems is a very crude solution."
Duncan proposes instead that, given
"feather pecking has hereditary characteristics....
It therefore seems likely that the long-term
solution to this problem will be a genetic one..."
While certainly less objectionable than debeaking on a visceral level,
genetic manipulation of sentient beings to serve our purposes is not only extremely ethically problematic, but
—once again—what got us into this position in the first place.
The animal products industries have honed these beings at a
genetic level to meet specific demands and performance.
Laying hens have traditionally been bred for producing
as many eggs as possible in a caged environment.
Place them into a cage-free environment and mortality skyrockets.
So, the solution to the problems inadvertently created by genetic
manipulation is to further manipulate their genes.
Every time our breeding, confinement, mutilation and slaughter of non-human
animals invariably cause ethical, environmental and health problems,
we strive to solve them with different variations of breeding,
confinement, mutilation and slaughter.
We continue this cycle over and over again—addressing problems
of our own creation with solutions that will eventually become our next problem
—rather than stepping back and questioning our use of animals in the first place.
Even if less hens die in one housing system
than another, is that truly any indicator of their quality of life?
As the authors of the meta analysis themselves poignantly state:
"Put simply, what makes animals suffer is not necessarily what kills them."
There are mountains of research and governmental regulations
you can read through regarding the welfare of laying hens around the world.
What I've covered just touches the surface.
But in the end, while I believe it's vital to know the truth behind humane
claims, it's our use of animals in and of itself that's inhumane.
No matter what label we give it.
I hope this video has been helpful.
Don't forget to take the free eCourse to test your knowledge!
To stay in the loop about new Bite Size Vegan content
and updates, subscribe to the newsletter or
follow the Telegram channel for the most reliable notifications.
Now go live vegan, and I'll see you soon.