As a nation, we have been enjoying cheap pig and poultry products for many decades. It’s no surprise that these sectors have become highly specialised, with efficiencies delivered by breeding for yields, ensuring maximum feed to product ratios, and concentrating production around processing facilities such as in the Wye Valley, on the border of England and Wales.
For many years – without the kind of subsidies other livestock sectors had under the EU Common Agriculture Policy – it benefitted from cheap feeds via cheap soya protein imports and subsidised EU grain feeds. The sectors became ever more intensive and integrated, with production largely owned and directed by an ever-smaller group of large food businesses.
But all that ‘efficiency’ has come at a major price. Whilst the animal health and welfare and related issues have been explored by others, The Wildlife Trusts wanted to look at the total environmental impacts. This new research particularly explores the pressures for land use, nature’s recovery, and water systems, to get to grips with the problems of scale and concentration.