The fire started at Feather Crest Farms in Bryan, Texas, on Monday evening. Firefighters spent several hours putting out the blaze. 'If these were cats or dogs, there would be an international outcry,' wrote an animal advocate on X.
An intensive chicken farm that housed thousands of egg-laying hens has
caught fire in Texas (stock image) - Credit:
Andrew Skowron /
We
Animals Media
A huge fire at a farm in Texas has killed hens intensively farmed
for eggs.
The fire started at Feather Crest Farms in Bryan, Texas, on Monday
evening. Firefighters spent several hours putting out the blaze.
It is thought that tens of thousands of “egg-laying” hens may have
died, though the total number is unknown. The cause of the fire is
also reportedly yet to be determined.
Animal rights activists criticized the response of media outlets and
individuals who seemed more concerned with a possible rise in the
price of eggs than the enormous loss of life. “If these were cats or
dogs, there would be an international outcry,” wrote animal advocate
John Oberg on X.
Counting the lost lives
The devastating fire tore through two buildings on a factory farm in
Bryan, Texas.
Feather Crest Farms Chief Executive Officer Sam Krouse said in a
statement that only one of the buildings had chickens in it at the
time of the fire. He also confirmed that all the birds inside had
died, but did not give an estimate of the number.
According to Mercy for Animals, chicken barns can hold more than
20,000 birds at a time.
Last year, an estimated 100,000 hens died in a similar fire at an
egg farm in Connecticut. In 2022, a report from Animal Welfare
Institute estimated that more than half a million farmed animals,
including chickens, goats, sheeps, and rabbits, had died in barn
fires in a single year, many of them preventable.
Despite the hen death count, Fox News stated that “no one was
injured” in the fire. That phrasing mirrored reports in local news
that “there have been no injuries or deaths reported.” Feather Crest
Farms is owned by MPS Egg Farms, one of the biggest egg producers in
the United States. The company proclaims that “[w]ith 11 million
laying hens, MPS Egg Farms produces 9 million eggs […] every day.”text
Intensive egg farming
Mark Henderson / Alamy Stock Photo - Most “egg-laying” hens in the
US are farmed intensively (stock image)
In the US, the vast majority of egg-laying hens are raised in battery
cages. Each bird has a space no larger than an A4 sheet of paper.
The scale and suffering of the intensive egg industry is immense. In
the US, hens used to produce eggs have such limited space that they
are unable to carry out natural behaviors like stretching their
wings, perching, or nesting. Hens will be kept in these conditions
for around two years, before being sent to the slaughterhouse when
their egg production slows.
Male chicks are surplus to the industry, so they will be killed at
birth. This will either be done by gassing or maceration, where they
will be thrown into high-speed grinders while still alive.