Heather Moore, PETA
August 2011
[Ed. Note: THE most effective actions you can take to stop the pollution of our air, land and water caused by animal manure is to go vegan...now!]
Chickens outnumber people by as much as 400 to one in the Broiler Belt, according to Pew. The more chickens you have, the more chicken manure you get. The 523 million chickens raised and killed each year in Maryland and Delaware alone generate enough waste to fill the dome of the U.S. Capitol about 50 times—or almost once a week. The best way to protect the Chesapeake and chickens is to go vegan.
The Pew Environment Group released a report, "Big Chicken: Pollution and
Industrial Poultry Production in America," explaining how manure from
chicken farms in the "Broiler Belt"—the area extending from eastern Texas
through the southeastern United States to Maryland and Delaware—is virtually
choking the Chesapeake Bay. And I'll tell you, with these findings, it's the
chicken industry that should be called "Pee-ew."
Chickens outnumber people by as much as 400 to one in the Broiler Belt,
according to Pew. The more chickens you have, the more chicken manure you
get. The 523 million chickens raised and killed each year in Maryland and
Delaware alone generate enough waste to fill the dome of the U.S. Capitol
about 50 times—or almost once a week.
Farmers typically spread chicken waste on open fields or cropland, but
excess chicken poop—which contains excess like nitrogen and phosphorus—is
flowing into the Chesapeake, polluting the water and killing aquatic life. A
May 2010 Environmental Protection Agency report estimated that 19 percent of
excess nitrogen and 26 percent of excess phosphorus were directly linked to
animal manure. That's a lot of excess.
Pew suggests ways to regulate "big chicken" and other concentrated
animal-feeding operations, and I won't argue. But the best way to protect
the Chesapeake and chickens is to go vegan.
Return to Animal Rights Articles
Read more at The Meat
and Dairy Industries