0:00:00.000,0:00:02.512 What does cage-free mean? 0:00:02.587,0:00:11.600 The term may bring to mind happy chickens roaming free in a rolling [br]green field, their lush feathers glistening in the ample sunlight. 0:00:12.461,0:00:18.799 Well, here comes a vegan to rain on your chicken paradise parade... 0:00:19.826,0:00:24.165 (It's me...I'm the vegan...) 0:00:25.119,0:00:34.738 (music, bird song, animal noises and the soft buzzing of bees) 0:00:36.011,0:00:41.340 Hi, it's Emily from BiteSizeVegan.org, where you can [br]find free resources, eCourses, kids' content, 0:00:41.340,0:00:46.882 and a Guided Search to help you find just what [br]you need, even if you don't know what to ask! 0:00:46.882,0:00:53.559 Speaking of eCourses, this video has one of its very own, [br]so you can test your knowledge after watching! 0:00:53.709,0:00:58.680 For those of you watching this on BiteSizeVegan.org[br]—first of all, you're awesome 0:00:58.680,0:01:00.680 —just click the "take the eCourse now" button. 0:01:01.650,0:01:06.539 For those of you watching elsewhere, just head over to[br]BiteSizeVegan.org/CageFree 0:01:06.539,0:01:10.404 where you will also find all of the sources for this video 0:01:10.666,0:01:14.138 (and there are a lot... Cause I'm a nerd) 0:01:14.838,0:01:19.088 Before diving into the meaning of cage-free eggs, it's important to acknowledge 0:01:19.088,0:01:24.745 that the vast majority of the world's almost 8 billion[br]layer hens are still kept in battery cages 0:01:24.838,0:01:29.861 —one of the most intensive forms of confinement in the animal products industry. 0:01:29.861,0:01:36.509 Crammed together in these small, barren cages, each[br]individual hen is afforded less space than a single sheet of paper 0:01:36.509,0:01:41.390 —unable to extend their wings or even stand fully upright. 0:01:41.390,0:01:48.105 Denied the ability to engage in natural behaviors such as[br]foraging, wing-flapping, perching, dust bathing, and nesting, 0:01:48.199,0:01:51.838 hens in battery cages experience extreme distress— 0:01:51.838,0:01:56.849 manifesting in neurotic behavior, feather loss, aggression, and even cannibalism. 0:01:56.981,0:01:59.815 These hens live in constant pain, 0:01:59.815,0:02:07.709 often suffering from osteoporosis due to the combination of nutrient loss[br]from high egg production and a severe lack of movement. 0:02:07.840,0:02:17.144 Rising public concern over the last four decades regarding the horrific conditions[br]of battery cages has led to increasing demands for alternative systems. 0:02:17.256,0:02:23.610 Now, a total ban on battery cages sounds like a [br]huge move in the right direction, right? 0:02:23.610,0:02:30.986 Well, In 1999, The Council of the European Union set a directive [br]that banned all “barren battery cages” by 2012. 0:02:31.486,0:02:36.328 While media coverage at the time focused on the end of battery cages in the EU, 0:02:36.328,0:02:43.937 what the directive actually did was replace barren battery cages with [br]“enriched"—meaning furnished—battery cages. 0:02:44.180,0:02:49.255 Yes, hens would now be provided more space and given [br]furnishings like perches and laying nests 0:02:49.255,0:02:51.742 —certainly an improvement over barren cages. 0:02:51.896,0:03:02.104 However, while reports extolled that hens would now each be afforded 750cm²,[br]rather than the 550 cm² in conventional battery cages, 0:03:02.104,0:03:07.730 they neglected to clarify that—due to the new furnishings[br]—only 600cm² would be usable. 0:03:07.730,0:03:13.420 Meaning—in the end—that this revolutionary[br]step forward for the rights of laying hens 0:03:13.420,0:03:18.426 granted them less than a single playing card[br]of additional space. 0:03:18.426,0:03:29.907 Even more maddening: in 2012, over twelve years after the directive, [br]thirteen Member States had still failed to comply with the ban. 0:03:30.080,0:03:37.207 The 1999 Council Directive addressed more than an eventual end [br]to barren battery cages in favor of enriched cages 0:03:37.207,0:03:41.516 —it also introduced a third category, termed "alternative systems." 0:03:41.703,0:03:50.366 This umbrella term covered various non-cage systems, such as aviaries [br]and barns—including what we commonly refer to as "cage-free eggs." 0:03:50.529,0:03:53.464 So, what, exactly, does cage-free mean? 0:03:53.557,0:04:02.760 In the simplest terms, cage-free means exactly what it sounds like: [br]laying hens are never caged. But the simplicity ends there. 0:04:02.760,0:04:12.711 As the term "cage-free" primarily defines how hens are not to be housed, [br]the actual conditions under which cage-free hens are housed varies greatly; 0:04:12.786,0:04:17.282 standards are largely unspecified, unverified and unregulated. 0:04:17.413,0:04:22.411 In the U.S., the United Stated Department of Agriculture (USDA) [br]only specifies that cage-free eggs 0:04:22.523,0:04:27.797 "must be produced by hens housed in a building, room or enclosure [br]that allows for unlimited access to food and water 0:04:27.797,0:04:32.490 and provides the freedom to roam the area during the laying cycle." 0:04:32.490,0:04:39.662 Cage-free eggs graded by the USDA are subject to on-site inspections[br]twice a year, purely to ensure the hens are not in cages. 0:04:39.662,0:04:43.601 Additionally, not all cage-free eggs are graded by the USDA, 0:04:43.601,0:04:49.782 so many cage-free labels do not have any verification [br]at all that the hens they came from were not caged. 0:04:50.110,0:04:55.000 In the European Union, while the term "cage-free"[br]doesn't seem to be widely used, 0:04:55.000,0:05:01.503 non-cage systems are required to "not exceed [br]9 laying hens per m² usable area." 0:05:01.503,0:05:04.746 This affords each hen a little over a square foot of space. 0:05:05.000,0:05:10.394 There are no such stocking density limits in the United States, among other countries. 0:05:10.490,0:05:16.041 The separation between cage and non-cage farming is often completely non-existent: 0:05:16.041,0:05:22.090 many egg producers have both caged and cage-free facilities on the same property. 0:05:22.090,0:05:26.361 Purchasing cage-free eggs is in no way supporting smaller, independent farmers. 0:05:26.361,0:05:33.557 That said, there is no denying that almost anything would be[br]an improvement over life in a battery cage. 0:05:33.557,0:05:40.320 However, as we've learned with "enriched" cages, alternative systems [br]aren't the idyllic environments we may envision. 0:05:40.432,0:05:48.367 Cage-free hens are kept indoors, usually in windowless buildings. [br]Each structure may contain thousands to tens of thousands of birds. 0:05:48.367,0:05:56.890 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. 0:05:56.890,0:06:04.181 Additionally, cage-free hens are not spared the cruel [br]"standard practices" of the egg industry as a whole. 0:06:04.336,0:06:09.551 All hens are sourced from hatcheries where male chicks are killed upon hatching. 0:06:09.551,0:06:16.532 The primary method recommended by the European Union's humane [br]regulations, and implemented worldwide, is "maceration" 0:06:16.532,0:06:23.036 —a euphemistic term for dropping newborn male chicks [br]into a meat grinder while alive. 0:06:23.672,0:06:28.180 It's estimated that 3.2 billion male chicks are killed every year. 0:06:28.787,0:06:37.005 Cage-free hens are still subjected to debeaking —a painful mutilation [br]in which a portion of their sensitive beaks are cut or burned off. 0:06:37.005,0:06:46.930 In the few countries where debeaking is banned, hens face increased mortality rates from aggressive pecking brought on by crowded and stressful living conditions. 0:06:47.030,0:06:53.710 The living beings within all animal product industries[br]are viewed as just that—products. 0:06:53.710,0:07:01.176 Laying hens are no different—everything from their environment to their [br]very genetics are engineered for maximum egg output. 0:07:01.176,0:07:07.441 Artificial lighting is used to constantly manipulate hens' [br]hormones in order to increase their egg production. 0:07:07.520,0:07:13.477 One of the most cruel practices within the[br]egg industry is what's referred to as "induced molting." 0:07:13.477,0:07:19.160 Farmers remove the hens’ food for weeks, literally starving them. 0:07:19.160,0:07:26.267 The hens lose up to 35% of their body weight, along[br]with their feathers, allowing their reproductive tracts to “refresh” 0:07:26.267,0:07:29.154 so they can pump out another round of eggs. 0:07:29.154,0:07:35.930 They are also subjected to more extreme forms of light manipulation,[br]at times enduring a week of constant light. 0:07:35.930,0:07:40.200 There is nothing within the cage-free label that prohibits this barbaric practice. 0:07:40.200,0:07:46.388 While forced molting is banned in some countries,[br]this simply means the hens are slaughtered after they are no longer profitable 0:07:46.538,0:07:49.400 —a fate which awaits every layer hen. 0:07:49.531,0:07:55.972 No matter the label, housing conditions or country, all [br]layer hens are killed when their egg production declines 0:07:56.103,0:08:05.289 —typically when they are 70-80 weeks old. No longer able to turn a profit, [br]they are sent to their deaths—still mere babies themselves. 0:08:05.370,0:08:09.903 In caged systems, hens can be more effectively separated from their waste. 0:08:10.165,0:08:17.220 In cage-free systems, the ammonia from their waste can cause [br]dangerous conditions for the hens, workers, and the public. 0:08:17.220,0:08:24.395 A study looking into the sources of particulate pollution found the [br]poultry industry to be the greatest single contributor. 0:08:24.395,0:08:34.300 The ammonia in poultry litter "combines with other pollutants—[br]sulfur dioxide and nitrous oxide...to produce a secondary source of [br]additional deadly [fine particulate matter]." 0:08:34.300,0:08:38.167 The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has estimated that this[br]kind of fine particulate matter (PM 2.5) 0:08:38.279,0:08:43.634 "is responsible for over 90% of air pollution-related health damages." 0:08:43.770,0:08:48.589 A large-scale study by the Coalition for Sustainable Egg Supply [br](CSES) research project 0:08:48.589,0:08:55.050 found the mortality rate (meaning death rate) in non-cage[br]systems to be 2.5 times higher than in battery cage systems. 0:08:55.050,0:08:59.310 This finding was far from isolated to one study or country. 0:08:59.310,0:09:07.615 The primary causes of increased mortality in non-cage systems include: [br]injurious pecking, cannibalism, and disease transference. 0:09:07.746,0:09:13.435 These very issues are a large part of why battery cages were invented in the first place 0:09:13.654,0:09:19.712 —confining hens in cages makes it much easier to manage behavioral [br]issues and disease outbreaks. 0:09:19.806,0:09:26.927 Pointing to the housing system as the reason for more deaths, is an [br]oversimplification of what is a very complex issue. 0:09:26.927,0:09:32.470 A meta-analysis of data from 29 sources covering commercial farms in 16 countries 0:09:32.470,0:09:38.228 indicates a possible decline in mortality rates within[br]non-cage systems in more recent years. 0:09:38.228,0:09:44.807 The authors argue that this decline will continue as producers become [br]more familiar with managing non-cage systems, 0:09:44.807,0:09:48.636 and as more "appropriate" hen breeds are created and utilized. 0:09:48.636,0:09:54.363 They also emphasize are created and utilized. the importance of debeaking [br]hens to reduce injurious and cannibalistic behavior. 0:09:54.513,0:10:00.622 At first glance, this decline in mortality rates in non-cage systems [br]may sound like a promising trend. 0:10:00.734,0:10:09.637 Yet, rather than pointing to reasons for hope, the proposed causes of the decline actually highlight a stark reality: 0:10:09.881,0:10:15.000 within the animal products industries, the solutions are the problems. 0:10:15.143,0:10:19.902 When hens injure and kill one another due to their breeding and living conditions 0:10:20.201,0:10:23.014 —both of which have been imposed upon them— 0:10:23.014,0:10:27.220 the solution is to cut off their beaks and alter their breeding. 0:10:27.220,0:10:35.670 Ian J.H. Duncan, Professor Emeritus and Emeritus Chair in Animal Welfare at the University of Guelph, Canada, illustrates this predicament, saying: 0:10:35.670,0:10:42.211 "If [producers] do not trim beaks, then feather[br]pecking and cannibalism may cause enormous suffering. 0:10:42.286,0:10:47.746 If they do trim beaks by conventional methods, [br]the birds will suffer from acute and chronic pain... 0:10:47.914,0:10:54.392 Chopping off parts of young animals in order to prevent future [br]welfare problems is a very crude solution." 0:10:54.500,0:10:58.660 Duncan proposes instead that, given [br]"feather pecking has hereditary characteristics.... 0:10:58.660,0:11:03.720 It therefore seems likely that the long-term[br]solution to this problem will be a genetic one..." 0:11:03.720,0:11:08.641 While certainly less objectionable than debeaking on a visceral level, 0:11:08.641,0:11:20.534 genetic manipulation of sentient beings to serve our purposes is not only extremely ethically problematic, but [br]—once again—what got us into this position in the first place. 0:11:20.550,0:11:27.655 The animal products industries have honed these beings at a [br]genetic level to meet specific demands and performance. 0:11:27.655,0:11:34.204 Laying hens have traditionally been bred for producing [br]as many eggs as possible in a caged environment. 0:11:34.204,0:11:38.794 Place them into a cage-free environment and mortality skyrockets. 0:11:38.794,0:11:47.020 So, the solution to the problems inadvertently created by genetic [br]manipulation is to further manipulate their genes. 0:11:47.392,0:11:56.140 Every time our breeding, confinement, mutilation and slaughter of non-human [br]animals invariably cause ethical, environmental and health problems, 0:11:56.309,0:12:02.740 we strive to solve them with different variations of breeding, [br]confinement, mutilation and slaughter. 0:12:02.946,0:12:13.599 We continue this cycle over and over again—addressing problems [br]of our own creation with solutions that will eventually become our next problem 0:12:13.599,0:12:19.098 —rather than stepping back and questioning our use of animals in the first place. 0:12:19.120,0:12:26.706 Even if less hens die in one housing system[br]than another, is that truly any indicator of their quality of life? 0:12:26.875,0:12:31.269 As the authors of the meta analysis themselves poignantly state: 0:12:31.269,0:12:38.580 "Put simply, what makes animals suffer is not necessarily what kills them." 0:12:38.580,0:12:45.192 There are mountains of research and governmental regulations [br]you can read through regarding the welfare of laying hens around the world. 0:12:45.192,0:12:47.860 What I've covered just touches the surface. 0:12:47.860,0:12:58.901 But in the end, while I believe it's vital to know the truth behind humane [br]claims, it's our use of animals in and of itself that's inhumane. 0:12:59.200,0:13:01.993 No matter what label we give it. 0:13:02.180,0:13:07.295 I hope this video has been helpful. [br]Don't forget to take the free eCourse to test your knowledge! 0:13:07.482,0:13:11.990 To stay in the loop about new Bite Size Vegan content[br]and updates, subscribe to the newsletter or 0:13:11.990,0:13:15.898 follow the Telegram channel for the most reliable notifications. 0:13:15.898,0:13:18.536 Now go live vegan, and I'll see you soon.