WorldPoultry: Canadian egg farmers change housing strategy19-02-2016
Feb 18, 2016 Egg Farmers of Canada (EFC) made the announcement on behalf of the more than 1,000 Canadian egg farms, that a coordinated, systematic, market-oriented transition from conventional egg production toward other methods of production for supplying eggs will begin. This collective approach is to take hen welfare, human health, other resource implications, environmental impact and food production sustainability all into account. Diversifying egg production practices Major shift to enriched housing, free-range Under the plan, to be overseen by a national working group in collaboration with the entire egg supply chain, the industry expects to achieve about a 50-50% mix in 8 years, about 85% (alternative production) in 15 years. All production would be in enriched housing, free-run, aviary or free-range by 2036 assuming the current market conditions prevail. Benefits of enriched housing Production methods were assessed by the Coalition for Sustainable Egg Supply's four-year, commercial-scale study that looked at the sustainability of three different types of hen housing (conventional, aviary and enriched). Their research showed that enriched housing provides the benefits afforded by conventional production and additional features. It also allows hens to exhibit specific behaviours which may include perching, scratching, foraging, dust bathing and nesting. |