More Than 27,000 Hidden Factory Farms Exposed In New Map

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Animal rights activists published a map with the locations of more than 27,000 factory farms.

This includes 5,812 farms identified via satellite, many of which previously did not appear on public record. The map, known as Project Counterglow, aims to assist activist investigators. The project also provides an overview of the scale of animal agriculture, while the industry has spent years evading widespread exposure.

Project Counterglow users can also attach photos and videos documenting animal cruelty at specific locations, as well as pin new factory farms to the map. The project encourages activists to document health and safety violations in addition to animal welfare violations.

The founding Project Counterglow team is led by animal activist and undercover investigator Kecia Doolittle. Supporters of such investigations claim that they demand accountability in an industry plagued by human rights and animal rights violations.

Most recently, the animal rights group Direct Action Everywhere (DxE) shared footage of a killing method known as “ventilation shutdown” from Iowa Select Farms, the largest pork producer in the state. It involves placing pigs in a barn, sealing exits, and shutting off the ventilation system to cause death by hyperthermia.

News outlet The Intercept reported on the technique in detail, which resulted in an unnecessarily slow, painful death for the animals on the farm. “I didn’t believe it was real,” said Doolittle.

The American Association of Swine Veterinarians endorses ventilation shutdown in “constrained circumstances.”

The US meat industry has slaughtered millions of animals early with no profit.

Factory Farming and Coronavirus

Experts have linked the conditions typically found in intensive factory farming with the risk of future pandemics.

Overcrowding, poor sanitation, use of antibiotics, and ineffective waste management can all lead to pollution and disease. Some experts believe that overcrowded pigs and poor waste management caused the initial outbreak of swine flu (H1N1).

The ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has closed meatpacking plants and restricted the processing and distribution of meat products. As a result, farmers with nowhere to sell their livestock have killed millions of animals to avoid incurring further losses.

According to the National Pork Producers Council, pig farmers may need to euthanize up to 10 million pigs by September.

This post was last modified on December 15, 2020 6:24 am

Liam Pritchett

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Liam Pritchett