Canada is in the midst of a record-breaking wildfire season. Wildfires have burned more acres in Canada this year than at any other time in recorded history. Wildfires are made worse by climate change, which increases the frequency and severity of natural disasters. One of the leading causes of climate change is the animal agriculture industry.
Wildfires are raging across British Columbia and the Northwest
Territories, damaging several towns and forcing thousands of
residents to evacuate, including 19,000 residents from Yellowknife
and 30,000 in the Okanagan. The British Columbia government has
declared a state of emergency and is urging the public to closely
monitor wildfire updates.
There are hundreds of active wildfires in both provinces that have
been largely caused by dry and windy conditions, mixed with dry
lighting—which has not only sparked new fires, but has caused swift
and terrifying growth in existing ones.
Canada is in the midst of a record-breaking wildfire season.
Wildfires have burned more acres in Canada this year than at any
other time in recorded history. Wildfires are made worse by climate
change, which increases the frequency and severity of natural
disasters.
Animal Agriculture is a Climate Disaster
One of the leading causes of climate change is the animal
agriculture industry. Studies estimate that animal agriculture is
responsible for at least 14% of all greenhouse gas emissions—as much
as the entire transport sector. Greenhouse gasses, including carbon
dioxide and methane, trap the sun’s heat and prevent it from
returning into the atmosphere, raising global temperatures.
The animal agriculture industry often tries to downplay its effect
on the environment through denial, misdirection, and relentless
greenwashing campaigns. But there’s nothing green about meat, eggs,
or dairy. Terms like “regenerative grazing”, “low-carbon chicken”,
and “sustainable beef” are just some of the misleading buzzwords
used to dupe caring consumers into consuming animal products.
Moving to a plant-based food system will not only help animals, but
help combat climate change and its devastating effects.
Wildfires are exacerbated by climate change.
Weather Emergencies Wreak Havoc on Animals
Like people, wildfires pose a serious risk to animals in the wild
and on farms.
Wild animals desperately try to flee or seek shelter to protect
themselves from the flames. After wildfires are gone, many of the
surviving animals die from the devastating loss of their habitats,
food sources, and nesting sites.
The vast majority of farmed animals in Canada are raised in factory
farms in large numbers, and are uniquely vulnerable to being left
behind to suffer during emergencies, including wildfires, heat dome
events, and floods.
Documents obtained by Animal Justice revealed that at least 651,000
chickens and other birds died on farms during the 2021 British
Columbia heat dome event. The same year, 640,000 chickens, pigs, and
cows died due to catastrophic flooding in the province.
In 2021, 640,000 farmed animals died in BC floods. Photo: Nick
Schafer | We Animals Media
Limit Farm Sizes to Protect Farmed Animals
In Canada, there are no regulations setting out welfare standards
for farmed animals, and no legal limit on the number of animals that
can be housed on farms.
For years, Animal Justice has been calling on governments to cap
farm sizes so that all animals can be realistically evacuated during
weather emergencies, and to make emergency rescue plans a legal
requirement.
We will continue to push for an end to the current industrialized
farming system, which not only puts animals at risk from climate
disasters, but subjects them to unimaginable cruelty in mass
confinement.