Broiler Chickens Fact Sheet
Broiler Chickens Fact Sheet
Broiler Chickens Fact Sheet
In this factsheet...
1. History 2. Intensive selective breeding 3. Housing 4. Transportation 5. Slaughter 6. Australian Model Code of Practice
Every year in Australia alone, an astonishing 488* million chickens are raised and slaughtered for meat. Only around 4% of chickens are raised free range in Australia (and about half of that is also organic).
*Australian Chicken Meat Federation estimate for 2006/7
History
Intensification of the broiler chicken industry started in the late 1950's, when the use of 'dual purpose' chickens for egg and meat production ceased and new poultry strains were produced specifically for meat production. For example, in 1950/51, only 3 million broilers were raised commercially, and now over 400 million are raised and killed in Australia each year. In addition to the breeding program to grow chickens faster (and so cheaper), demand was also growing, and for example Kentucky Fried Chicken opened its first Australian store in 1968, and increased chicken consumption radically. In the early 1970s in just 12 months as 75 Kentucky Fried Chicken stores opened, Australian production of chicken increased 38%. The result of the narrowly focused breeding programs has been a bird which grows twice or three times as fast as a normal chicken and converts its food into meat in a much more efficient way. Most are raised under intensive systems and reach slaughter weight at 5-7 weeks of age. As a consequence the price of chicken meat has declined and consumption has risen several fold. To achieve the economies of scale to allow ever cheaper production the broiler industry is concentrated primarily with only a few very large companies in Australia, and is totally integrated - from growing and manufacturing the high protein feed needed for the chickens, breeding the chicks (about 6 million breeder parent birds in Australia), contracting the growers to raise them in large sheds, to mechanized slaughtering and processing plants. Three large integrated companies supply about 80% of Australias broiler chickens - Inghams Enterprises, Bartter Enterprises and Baiada. The modern phenomenon of cheap chicken comes at enormous costs to the welfare of the animals involved.
Housing
A typical facility may house 300,000 birds at a time with 40,000 - 60,000 birds per shed. Contracted growers for the large companies therefore each grow several million birds annually.
The chickens live on the ground on litter (wood shavings, rice hulls etc) in huge sheds. Overcrowding is a major problem as stocking densities of 20 birds or 40kg per square metre are allowed are this is common towards the end of their short life in the shed.. This includes space for feeding and watering equipment, which means that for birds that are slaughtered at 2 kilograms, each has the equivalent of 500 square centimetres floor space (less than the size of an A4 page). As the chickens near their target weight the floor of the shed can barely be seen as it is carpeted with birds. The sheds are dimmed to keep the birds as inactive as possible so that food conversion is maximised and pecking and fighting through frustration and over-crowding minimized. The production system is all-in/ all out which means that for the whole of the 5 - 7 weeks that the birds are in the shed the droppings are allowed to accumulate on the floor As the chickens grow the air may become polluted with ammonia, dust, bacteria and fungal spores which cause health problems for both people and chickens.
Transportation
At approximately 5-7 weeks of age, chickens have reached the 'target' weight for slaughter. Before catching the chickens to be transportation for slaughter, food is withdrawn for 8-12 hours and water for 1 hour. Catchers walk through the sheds at night grabbing birds by one leg and carrying them in bunches (up to five each hand) to crates. They are then bundled into the crates and stacked onto a truck. Humane handling is impossible as catchers must handle 300-500 birds per hour. Many of the birds already have fractures and dislocations and this process adds significantly to their pain. Once on the truck, the chickens, who have spent their entire lives in dim sheds are then exposed to traffic noise and at times also temperature extremes. Some will die during transportation due to rough handling or in summer due to heat stroke if the truck ventilation is poor. Other causes of death include heart failure, trauma and blood loss due to hemorrhage into dislocated hip joints resulting from the rough catching process. As with all animals and birds factory-farmed in Australia, the first glimpse that they will have the outside world is likely to be on their way to be slaughtered. Each year in Australia almost 1 million chickens are estimated to die during transport to the slaughterhouse. Of those that survive, some 14 million may have fractures (3%) and over 20 million chickens (4.5%) may have dislocated hips when they arrive for slaughter (based on UK studies using similar birds and transport systems).
Slaughter
When the trucks arrive at the slaughterhouse, chickens are pulled from the crates and shackled upside down by their feet into metal stirrups on an overhead conveyor.. The conveyor carries them into the killing room where their heads pass through an electrified water bath intended to stun them. As they pass along further, an automatic knife cuts their throat, and then they proceed into a scalding tank to loosen their feathers before plucking.
Unfortunately things do not always run smoothly. Some birds lift their heads and miss the electrified water bath and they are therefore still fully conscious when they reach the automatic knife. Some birds may also miss the knife and are then lowered into the 50 degree scalding tank while still alive. Back-up people are supposed to cut the throats of the chickens that miss the automatic knife, but due to the emphasis on speed in the processing plants this may not always occur. There are no animal welfare inspectors onsite to ensure that the slaughter process is humane.
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