
Environmental Impact
Latest News On The Environmental Impact Of Factory Farming
Click here to read "Cultivating Destruction: The global impact of industrial cruelty" By Cara Hoffman
Click here to see a map of factory farms in the U.S. from Food and Water Watch's website!
Inevitably,
intensive animal agriculture depletes valuable natural resources.
Instead of being eaten by people, the vast majority of grain
harvested in the U.S. is fed to farm animals. This wasteful
and inefficient practice has forced agribusiness to exploit
vast stretches of land. Forests, wetlands, and other natural
ecosystems and wildlife habitats have been decimated and turned
into crop and grazing land. Scarce fossil fuels, groundwater,
and topsoil resources which took millenium to develop are
now disappearing.
Meanwhile, the quantity of waste produced by farm animals
in the U.S. is more than 130 times greater than that produced
by humans. Agricultural runoff has killed millions of fish,
and is the main reason why 60% of America's rivers and streams
are "impaired". In states with concentrated animal
agriculture, the waterways have become rife with pfiesteria
bacteria. In addition to killing fish, pfiesteria causes open
sores, nausea, memory loss, fatigue and disorientation in
humans. Even groundwater, which takes thousands of years to
restore, is being contaminated. For example, the aquifer under
the San Bernadino Dairy Preserve in southern California contains
more nitrates and other pollutants than water coming from
sewage treatment plants.
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