Untitled Document
Look to the giant ‘chicken jails’ or chicken factory farms
around the world as a more likely source for emerging Bird Flu viruses, not
to small peasant chicken farmers, and we might be closer to the truth
Clouds can have ‘silver linings’ the adage goes, and Bird
Flu seems to be no exception. While much of the world trembles in panic and
fear over an as-yet-non-existent human-to-human mutation of the Avian Flu or
H5N1 virus, and while most worry what to do to protect themselves and their
families, certain people are doing quite nicely in the situation.
Donald Rumsfeld and other major stock holders of Gilead Sciences or
Roche Inc., the marketers of the much-hyped Tamiflu (see previous articles,
‘Is Tamiflu another Pentagon Hoax? ;‘Bird Flu: A Corporate Bonanza
for the Biotech Industry’) are reaping nice gains, as sales of the medication
are booming thanks to promotion by the Bush and Blair governments.
Agribusiness companies stand to reap huge gains in the event that scientists
at Cambridge University and elsewhere are able to replace the entire world chicken
population with genetically-engineered chicks allegedly resistant to H5N1 virus.
Little-noticed beneficiaries of the current Avian Flu scare, however,
are the giant agribusiness chicken producers based in the United States, who
claim ‘their’ chickens are safe. Their sales are booming and all
indications are that Avian Flu, paradoxically, has come like a Godsend to their
corporate balance sheets. Are they also responsible for breeding unsanitary
conditions and exporting the product worldwide causing disease, illness and
even deaths?
On October 23, 2005, Dr. Margaret Chan, Representative of the WHO Director-General
for Pandemic Influenza, the key person responsible for global oversight of the
threat from the H5N1 strain of Bird Flu, told Newsweek magazine, ‘the
risk to humans in Europe, the risk to human health is very low in Europe.’
Chan came to her senior post at WHO from Hong Kong, where she was responsible
for the public health response to the SARS epidemic in 2003-4. She told Newsweek,
‘our alert is at Phase III, and that has not changed recently. Phase VI
is the highest, when there's a pandemic…We do not want to see complacency,
but we also do not want to see people getting alarmed. At this point, avian
influenza is a bird disease.’ 1
That statement coming from the international public official most directly
responsible, gives little ground to justify the mood of panic and the hoarding
of dubious medications such as Tamiflu. Who else gains from the current panic
over a potential human Avian Flu pandemic?
At this point a close look at the world poultry business is highly enlightening.
Factory Chicken Farms
Curiously enough, it is not the huge, unsanitary, overcrowded factory chicken
farms of the global agri-giants which are being scrutinized as a possible incubator
or source of H5N1 or other diseases. Rather, the target is the small chicken
farmers in especially Asia, with at most perhaps 10 to 20 chickens, who stand
to lose big-time in the current Bird Flu hysteria.
The major chicken factories such as Tyson Foods, Perdue Farms, ConAgra Poultry
are making a propaganda campaign that, unlike in Asia where chickens are free
to roam in the open, that their chickens are ‘safer’ because they
are raised in closed facilities. A closer look inside those facilities is useful.
Over the past three decades, American agriculture has been transformed so as
to be almost unrecognizable. It is no longer dominated by small, carefully-run
family farms producing some wheat, maybe corn, dairy and perhaps eggs and poultry
fed and raised in a free-running farm area.
Today, thanks to a project launched in the late 1950’s by two Harvard
Business School professors--Ray Goldberg and John Davis--production of food
has become a concentrated, vertically integrated multinational business, which
they named agribusiness. The criterion is no longer human food safety or quality.
It is corporate profit. Nutrition has become a pure cost-benefit calculation
of shareholder value, just as trading in stocks in a car company might be.
The industrialization of chicken-raising and slaughtering in the USA, which
is known as ‘factory farming’ is a process whose inner workings
are unknown to most people. Better it remained so some say. Were we to know,
we likely would never again eat a Chicken McNugget or a KFC chicken dinner,
both of which are supplied, by the way, by Tyson.
Today, five giant multinational agribusiness companies dominate the production
and processing of chicken meat in the United States, and, as things seem to
be going, especially were the world to be looney enough to adopt genetically
modified chickens supposedly resistant to Avian Flu virus, these five companies
are about to dominate world chicken supply.
According to a trade source, WATT Poultry USA, as of 2003 five companies held
overwhelming domination of the US poultry production, all of them vertically
integrated. US regulators and Congressmen seem to have forgotten the tough laws
against vertical integration in the meatpacking and poultry industry following
widespread scandals and the expose during the 1920’s, The Jungle, by Upton
Sinclair, exposing the health and human abuse inside the Chicago meatpacking
industry.
The five companies are Tyson Foods, far the largest in the world; GoldKist
Inc; Pilgrim’s Pride; ConAgra Poultry; and Perdue Farms. Together, the
five account for well over 370 million pounds per week of ready-to-cook chicken,
some 56% of all ready-to-eat poultry produced in the USA. That is a level of
concentration far in excess of anything in the 1920’s.
Alone, Tyson Foods processes 155 million pounds of chicken a week, almost three
times its nearest rival, GoldKist. Tyson is big business, with over $26 billion
a year in revenue. During the latest Bird Flu scare, for the Quarter ending
September 30, Tyson Foods’ earnings rose an eye-popping 49%, and, despite
a 10% fall in chicken sales, its profit in chickens grew a robust 40%. The key,
the company said, was measures it took to ‘boost productivity.’
2
Boosting productivity for Tyson and the other chicken giants clearly means
one thing: speedup of the production line, further slashing labor costs, and
reducing safety measures in their slaughtering and packing plants.
Tough Men and Tender Chickens?
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) released a report in 2004 on
the economic impact to date of Avian or Bird Flu.3 It noted
that the main impact of the panic which has grown globally since around 2003,
has been economic loss, not human deaths. ‘The impact of countries banning
both Thai and Chinese poultry exports,’ the FAO report noted, ‘are
leading to higher international poultry prices and increasing demand for poultry
meat from other major suppliers, such as the United States…’
Increasing Asian demand for imported chicken products from the United States
today, however, has a special significance. It means three to four giant factory
farm operations are opening a potentially huge new market for chicken products
in Asia.
Asia today is home to seven billion chickens, fully 40% of the world total.
US chicken giants like Tyson Foods, ConAgra and Perdue Farms have literally
been drooling at the prospect of breaking into the vast market in Asia, Japan
and China for several years. Bird Flu is giving them that chance and more.
Japan imports some 70% of all chicken its population consumes. The Bird Flu
scare resulted in a Japanese ban on chicken imports from Thailand and China.
The benefactors have been USA and Brazil chicken exporters according to the
FAO. And that means, above all, Tyson Foods, Perdue, ConAgra.
One of the better known radio ads in the United States in recent years had
the motto, ‘It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken…’
It was the popular slogan of the late Frank Perdue of Perdue Farms, one of the
world’s top five giant chicken producers. The ‘tough man’
part of Perdue Farms is accurate. The company, which boasts of being fully integrated
from ‘egg to supermarket meat case,’ had $2.8 billion in sales in
2004 and pushes 48 million pounds of chicken parts on the world consumer weekly,
in 40 countries. Perdue, like all its chicken factory colleagues, has been fined
by the US Government for safety and health violations in its chicken processing
plants and for efforts to bust trade union organizing in its plants.
Tyson Foods, based in Bill Clinton’s home state of Arkansas, enjoyed
intimate ties to the Clinton Administration during the 1990’s. Some would
say too intimate. It was Tyson General Counsel, James Blair, who set up a sweetheart
deal to get Hillary Clinton an education in sophisticated and highly risky cattle
futures, turning her $1,000 investment into a quick $100,000 windfall. Soon
after helping Hillary, Tyson Foods found a friend in the new Clinton Secretary
of Agriculture, Mike Espy. A US Judge found that Tyson had arranged airplane
rides, professional football tickets and other gifts to Espy. Tyson agreed to
pay a $6 million fine for ‘attempting’ to bribe a Federal official.
Tyson is also adept at taking over rivals. In 1997, after repeatedly failing
in a takeover bid, Tyson bought rival poultry producer Hudson Foods. And they
bought it at a steeply-discounted price.
Hudson Foods was suddenly hit with an e coli bacteria scandal. US Government
regulators descended on the company, even sending in a so-called ‘SWAT
team’ to shut down operations. Press carried horror stories about the
company. Within hours, the company's stock value plummeted. Within weeks, rival
Tyson Foods bought Hudson Foods. Tyson CEO Don Tyson’s Arkansas friend
Bill Clinton was President of the United States, theoretically responsible for
deployment of such operations as Federal Swat Teams to shut down companies.
Tyson Foods was able to buy Hudson Foods only after the small company had been
brought to its knees, at least in part through a public health scare and some
government brute force. No one ever proved that Tyson and the Clinton Administration
were in cahoots in the Hudson Foods e coli scare, with its unprecedented Government
raid. Yet no one ever proved the opposite either. Tyson had swallowed another
rival, anaconda-style.
Tyson Foods today has re-branded itself and now boasts of being ‘the
world’s largest protein producer,’ a pitch designed to let it benefit
from the current ‘high-protein/low carbohydrate’ Dr. Atkins diet
fad. Benefit it has, as US chicken consumption is up 24% since 1995. But that
evidently isn’t enough for the executives at Tyson Foods. They have their
eyes on the vast China and Asian market for chickens as we will later see.
4
Tyson Chicken Factories: The myth
The following is the company’s own description of its activities from
a 1998 filing, indicating the process Tyson Foods uses to produce 155 million
pounds a week of processed chicken:
‘The Company's integrated poultry processes include genetic research,
breeding, hatching, rearing, ingredient procurement, feed milling, veterinary
and other technical services, and related transportation and delivery services.
The Company contracts with independent growers to maintain the Company's flocks
of breeder chicks which, when grown, lay the eggs which the Company transfers
to its hatcheries and hatch into broiler chicks. Newly hatched broiler chicks
are vaccinated and then delivered to independent contract growers who care
for and feed the broiler chicks until they reach processing weight…
the Company provides growers with feed, vitamins and medication for the broilers,
if needed, as well as supervisory and technical services. The broilers are
then transported by the Company to its nearby processing plants. The Company
processed approximately 6.4 billion pounds of consumer poultry during fiscal
1998…
‘The Company's facilities for processing poultry and for housing live
poultry and swine are subject to a variety of federal, state and local laws
relating to the protection of the environment, including provisions relating
to the discharge of materials into the environment, and to the health and
safety of its employees… The cost of compliance with such laws and regulations
has not had a material adverse effect upon the Company's capital expenditures,
earnings or competitive position and it is not anticipated to…As of
October 3, 1998, the Company employed approximately 70,500 persons. The Company
believes that its relations with its workforce are good.’
The above company declaration is useful in light of the documented reality
of life at Tyson Foods today.
And the Reality…
The conditions of chicken breeding and slaughter documented inside the giant
factory chicken farms of Tyson, Perdue, ConAgra, contrary to their company propaganda,
are anything but reassuring to human health. A recent study of working conditions
in US meat and poultry slaughterhouses concluded:
‘Health and safety laws and regulations fail to address critical hazards
in the meat and poultry industry. Laws and agencies that are supposed to protect
workers’ freedom of association are instead manipulated by employers
to frustrate worker organizing. Federal laws and policies on immigrant workers
are a mass of contradictions and incentives to violate their rights. In sum,
the United States is failing to meet its obligations under international human
rights standards to protect the human rights of meat and poultry industry
workers.’5
A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report to the US Senate, ‘Safety
in the Meat and Poultry Industry,’ in January 2005, concluded that US
meat and poultry processing plants had ‘one of the highest rates of injury
and illness of any industry.’ They cited exposure to ‘dangerous
chemicals, blood, fecal matter, exacerbated by poor ventilation and often extreme
temperatures.’ Workers typically face hazardous conditions, loud noise,
must work in narrow confines with sharp tools and dangerous machinery.
In the United States, approximately 8.5 billion ‘broiler’ chickens
are killed for food in the US each year. That works out to 23 million chickens
every day. According to a recent report by VivaUSA, a non-profit organization
investigating conditions in US factory farms, ‘Thanks to genetic selection,
feed, and being prevented from moving or getting any exercise on factory farms,
chickens now grow to be much larger and to grow more quickly than ever before.’
Broilers today need an average of 6 weeks before slaughter compared with 12
weeks in the 1940’s. And that slaughtered chick has been produced at a
high cost.
The use of growth boosters has created major health problems in the huge factory
farm concentrations. Because of hormone and vaccine injections to speed growth,
muscle growth outstrips bone development and the chickens typically have leg
and skeletal disorders that significantly affect their ability to walk. Unable
to walk, they must sit in poor-quality litter, creating breast blisters or hock
burns. According to one report, ‘The dermatitis seen in such birds is
painful in itself but the effects of inability to walk are much more severe.’
Chicken organs are unable to keep up with their hyper growth rates, causing
hearts or lungs to fail or malfunction, and creation of excess fluids in their
bodies or death. Under special exemptions in US law, chickens are excluded from
the protections of the federal Animal Welfare Act. The federal government sets
no rules or standards for how these animals should be housed, fed, or treated
on farms. 6
The GAO study also confirmed a dramatic change in the US meat and poultry industry
since the Reagan Administration first opened the doors to union-busting and
vertical integration and concentration in the industry by de facto ignoring
enforcement of anti-trust and industrial safety laws such as the Occupational
Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSHA). In 1980 meat and poultry packing was highly
unionized, and well-paid work, with the accompanying union defence of working
and safety conditions. The industry was 46% unionized.
A decade later, by 1990, that rate had plunged to 21%, and today is far lower.
The wages plunged in parallel, as did the composition of workers in the plants.
Today, according to the GAO, more than 38% of production line workers in the
meat and poultry processing industry are foreign born. The GAO gives no data
on what percent are illegal immigrants. The largest percent of workers are male,
and 42% are Hispanic, and another 20% are black. But far from being a model
of fairness in racial minority hiring, the high rate of black and Hispanic workers
are precisely because companies find it easiest with the high unemployment rates
among those population groups to impose working conditions most workers would
refuse.
Encouraged by the Bush Administration’s benign neglect of anti-trust
laws and health and safety controls, the meat processing industry has shut down
countless unionized plants across the country, reopening new plants often in
the same area, typically manned with immigrant, non-union labor at drastically
lower wage levels.
Human Rights Watch, an NGO concerned with violations of worker rights, reported
on conditions in Tyson Foods’ Arkansas chicken processing plants:
‘The northwest corner of Arkansas is the center of the poultry industry
in Arkansas, the state’s largest private sector employer. The beautiful
green hills and valleys belie the environmental degradation of area watersheds
polluted by a tsunami of waste from one billion defecating chickens raised
and slaughtered each year in Arkansas.
‘Dozens of poultry processing plants are spread among the shopping
centers, modest homes and residential apartments of Bentonville, Rogers, Springdale,
Fayetteville, Forth Smith and other towns off Interstate I-540 in Northwest
Arkansas. The smell of dead chickens permeates the atmosphere. Poultry plants
are mostly nondescript, windowless facilities set back from the grid of roads
and highways in the area.
‘In the past decade, immigrant workers from Mexico and Central America
have supplanted many rural white and African-American workers in Northwest
Arkansas poultry plants, a demographic phenomenon characterizing the poultry
industry nationwide. Between 1990 and 2000, the foreign-born population of
the two largest counties in the area increased more than 600 percent. Nearly
all the increase was related to poultry industry employment. In Rogers and
Springdale, centers of the poultry processing industry in the area, immigrants
are more than 20 percent of the population.
‘Tyson runs sixty poultry processing plants engaged in slaughtering,
dressing, cutting, packaging, de-boning and further processing fifty million
chickens per week.’ 7
According to Earthsave International, some 30% of US chicken is tainted with
Salmonella and fully 62% with the equally virulent Campylobacter. Time magazine
termed raw chicken, ‘one of the most dangerous items in the American home.’
In 1997 contaminated chicken killed at least 1,000 in the United States and
poisoned and made sick 80 million others, orders of magnitude more deadly than
Avian Flu, but unreported in the media. Tyson, Perdue and the other agribusiness
chicken giants have created scientific breeding grounds for disease and pathogens.
Tyson’s ‘corporate citizenship’ leaves something to be desired.
The company, like Perdue Farms and the other industry giants, has systematically
worked to bust existing unions and drive out any workers who protested dangerous
working conditions. In 1993, the National Labor Relations Board found Tyson
Foods guilty of unlawfully directing and controlling a union expulsion at its
Dardanelle, Arkansas plant. The company interrogated workers about their union
sympathies and illegally promised wage increases, bonuses, and other benefits
if workers voted to get rid of the union.
In 1995, Tyson was found guilty of illegally eliminating a union in one acquired
company, Holly Farms. Tyson management coercively interrogated workers about
their union sympathies, threatened to arrest workers exercising their lawful
rights, threatened union supporters with firing if they remained loyal to the
union, and fired fifty-one workers for supporting the union. Tyson Foods CEO,
John Tyson, who calls himself a ‘devout Christian,’ talks about
creating a ‘faith-friendly company.’ Instead of union members working,
he prefers to have what the company calls its, ‘relationship with Team
Members (sic) as we operate without a union.’
One Tyson worker described the internal situation:
‘Tyson always gets rid of workers who protest or who speak up for others.
When they jumped from thirty-two chickens a minute to forty-two, a lot of
people protested. The company came right out and asked who the leaders were.
Then they fired them. They told us, ‘If you don’t like it, there’s
the door. There’s another eight hundred applicants waiting to take your
job.’ They are the biggest company so what they do goes for the rest.’
The factory chicken farms of Tyson and Perdue and company are also huge consumers
of corn and soybeans. In 1999 Tyson alone consumed 6.5 million tons of corn
and 2.8 million tons of soybeans. Today, almost all of the corn and soybeans
are genetically modified Monsanto crops, a factor whose long-term consequences
on human consumption have not been independently tested. Tyson apparently is
unconcerned about that as well.
Asia and US Chicken Factories
The concentration of so many animals in centralized, mechanized growing areas
or chicken jails across America has led to huge waste and pollution problems.
One smaller company, Foster Farms of California recently pled guilty of Clean
Water Act violations for illegally discharging 11 million gallons of water polluted
with decomposed chicken manure into the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge.
Perdue Farms, the US’ fifth largest poultry producer, recently added
a major chicken ‘factory farm’ operation in China.
China is also the dream destination of Tyson Foods, far and away the largest
producer of factory chicken meat in the world today. Well back in April 1997,
Tyson Foods entered an agreement with Kerry Holding Limited, a Hong Kong-based
subsidiary of the Kuok Group, to investigate the practicality of locating agribusiness
10 poultry complexes throughout China, each designed to process half a million
birds per week, or a total of 5 million chickens each week.
Today, Tyson CEO, Greg Lee, sees China as one of the most promising growth
areas for its chicken agribusiness, curious given the negative publicity about
Bird Flu cases in China. Lee recently told US media that ‘US poultry housing
and growing conditions are different from Asia and are more likely to protect
animals from disease…’ In March 2005 John Tyson told a Food Summit
in Chicago that Tyson saw its investments in China as laying the ‘foundation
for profits in coming years.’
Given the practices of Tyson, Perdue, ConAgra and the other US chicken factory
agribusiness giants, the governments of China, and the rest of the world ought
to look long and hard before allowing them license to build their chicken factory
farms in China.
The WHO recently described the conditions which are the origin of Bird Flu.
In an interview with a China media in early 2004, before the present Washington
alarm over Bird Flu pandemic dangers, the Geneva health organization described
the conditions under which the Bird Flu virus would spread. The WHO said H5N1
was ‘largely transmitted through bird droppings and uncooked meat.’
When a contaminated chicken makes an excrement the H5N1 strain of avian influenza
circulates in the air and is carried by the wind, according to the WHO findings.
‘Piled one on top of the other in cramped cages, the birds easily pass
the disease on with their dirty droppings,’ the WHO said, noting that
chicken breeders also risked inhaling the bug and got infected easier.
On the other hand, it was virtually impossible to catch bird flu by eating
cooked meat that is infected, said WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib. ‘The
cooking kills the virus,’ Chaib said, citing WHO experts. 8
Chickens piled on top of one another in cramped cages filled with dirty bird
feces and poor ventilation is an accurate description of the documented conditions
of the factory chicken farms of Tyson Foods, Perdue Farms and other US chicken
agribusiness giants.
Dr Walter Sontag, an Austrian zoologist who has studied the development of
the H5N1 virus, and who concluded that the alarm about Bird Flu pandemic is
vastly exaggerated, says, ‘A high density (of birds) in a small space
with defined food and water availability, and in addition, poor hygiene conditions
promote an explosive spread of pathogenic germ cells.’ Sontag goes on
to point out that ‘free-walking’ chickens, in contrast to the ‘jailed’
factory farm birds, ‘almost without exception keep a great distance from
humans.’ 9
It would be important to know whether any of the cases of Avian Flu documented
in China in recent years could be traced either to imports of US chickens from
giant producers such as Tyson Foods or to domestic chicken factory farms of
those companies in China or elsewhere in Asia. It is at least clear that a lot
more explanation from responsible governments and health officials is due on
the true origins and threats of Avian Flu.
Global research Contributing Editor F. William Engdahl is author of ‘A
Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order,’
London, Pluto Press Ltd. He has just completed the book, ‘Seeds of Destruction:
The geopolitics of Gene-ocide,’ about the political agenda underlying
spread of agribusiness and GMO foods worldwide. He can be contacted through
his website: www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net
___________________________________
Footnotes:
1 Nordland, Rod, Newsweek, Interview with Dr Margaret Chan
WHO, Oct. 23, 2005
2 WATT Poultry USA, WATT Poultry USA’s Rankings, January
2003.
3 FAO Fact Sheet : Market Impact of Avian Flu in Asia, Rome,
2004.
4 Cummings, David, Overseas Investments byU.S. Meat Corporations,
Centers for Epidemiology and Animal Health, July 2000, www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/ceah/cei/.
5 Human Rights Watch, Blood, Sweat, and Fear: Workers’
Rights in U.S. Meat and Poultry Plants. www.hrw.org,
January 2005.
6 VivaUSA, Chicken/Broiler Industry Media Briefing, www.vivausa.org.
7 Human Rights Watch, op. cit.
8 World Health Organization, Bird droppings prime origin of
bird flu , January 17, 2004.
9 Sontag, Dr Walter, Der Fluch der Vögel, in Wiener Zeitung.8
World Health Organization, Bird droppings prime origin of bird flu , January
17, 2004.
9 Sontag, Dr Walter, Der Fluch der Vögel, in Wiener Zeitung.