Thursday, April 1, 2010

The Evil of Smithfield Foods

website of "environmental leader" Smithfield

 
Although there is an oversupply of competition, from arms manufacturers to banks, the prize for the corporate entity that perpetrates the greatest amount of evil must surely go to Smithfield Foods Inc.

In the politics of food, the individuals who run Smithfield are like gigantic bullies, destroying livelihoods and multiplying misery. Thanks to their wagonload of lawyers and bought politicians they destroy ecosystems almost with impunity. For the moment, let’s forget about the farmers whose livelihoods Smithfield destroy, the suffering animals Smithfield torture on a massive scale and the poor workers whose labour Smithfield exploits in the vilest manner.  Instead let’s just focus on what Smithfield is doing to our environment and health, after all, on their own website they describe themselves as being “stewards of the environment” and committed to “environmental leadership”.

In 1967 there were one million hog farms in the USA; today there are just one hundred thousand. In testimony before the House Judiciary Committee in 2000 the president of the American National Farmers Union admitted that just four companies now produce 60% of the country’s pigs. By far the biggest is Smithfield. The factory farm methods that dominate American food production means, as novelist Jonathan Safran Foer writes in his Eating Animals (Hamish Hamilton, 2009): “farmed animals in the United States produce 130 times as much waste as the human population – roughly 87,000 pounds of shit per second.”  Most startling is that “there is almost no waste-treatment infrastructure for farmed animals… no sewage pipes, no one hauling it away for treatment, and almost no federal guidelines”.  And Smithfield and their like want to keep it that way.  Safran Foer informs us that Smithfield “produces at least as much fecal waste as the entire human population of the states of California and Texas combined”. Whatsmore, “the waste nurses more than 100 microbial pathogens that can make humans sick”.  That is hard to believe, isn’t it?  But it gets worse as he tells us that the waste includes “stillborn piglets, afterbirths, dead piglets, vomit, blood, urine, antibiotic syringes. hair, pus, even body parts”.  All of this, well, what used to be called in more innocent times “slurry” is dumped in gigantic cesspools, but when these are in danger of overflowing, Smithfield has an easy solution – they simply spray the liquefied manure onto fields, and when that doesn’t do the job “they simply spray it straight up into the air, a geyser of shit wafting fine fecal mists that create swirling gases capable of causing severe neurological damage.”  That’s called externalizing costs – it keeps Smithfield’s costs down, it keeps the cost of your pork down and instead everybody gets to pay.

Of course sometimes Smithfield goes too far and even the politicians who live in Smithfield’s pocket can’t protect them. Like in 1997 when Smithfield was found guilty of a few thousand violations of the Clean Water Act.  The company had knowingly dumped pollutants, including deadly faecal coli forms.  Safran Foer doesn’t tell us this, but according to The Guardian (May 2nd,  2009)most troublingly, they were also found guilty of falsifying documents (i.e. lying) and destroying records.  To pay for their sins they were fined a grand total of 12.6 million dollars, the amount of money it takes them ten hours to earn, every ten hours.

Of course we in Europe, with our much tighter pollution laws, can count ourselves lucky, right?  Since 1999 Smithfield has opened operations in Europe and moved into Poland, Romania, Spain, France, the UK (Norwich Food), as well as Mexico, Brazil and China. The upheaval they have caused in Eastern Europe has been particularly disturbing, described by The New York Times (May 5th, 2009) as one of “the Continent’s biggest agricultural transformations”.  Backed by its vast resources, including EU subsidies, and powerful local political allies, Smithfield is spearheading an agricultural revolution that ignores the protests of local small farmers and residents.  Big money talks and in 2001 Smithfield was able to thumb its nose at EU environmental regulations when Poland and Rumania reclassified pig manure as a “product” rather than a waste.  Now Smithfield’s dumping of “slurry” threatens the ecosystem of Northern Poland and the Baltic Sea.  You can watch a video on Youtube that shows one of its spillages in Poland, which includes not just tons of fecal waste, but also still born piglets, afterbirth, dead piglets and syringes.  So much for EU regulations. Robert Kennedy Jr. spoke to the Polish Senate on how “Smithfield’s invasion of North Carolina” has killed over 100 million fish in that state’s rivers.  But his speech fell on deaf ears.

Meanwhile, the recent swine flu epidemic broke out just five miles from Smithfield’s new hog farm in Mexico, the world’s biggest.  A large number of cases were recorded closer to Smithfield’s original home, in North Carolina. And swine fever swept through three of Smithfield’s Romanian hog compounds, two of which, surprise, surprise, they had opened without having a permit.

If only this were an April Fool's joke - but the joke is on us and Smithfield must be laughing. Jonathan Safran Foer summed it up: “one couldn’t imagine a more seemingly depraved company than Smithfield”. 

14 comments:

  1. And they aren't the only ones - long live capitalism! At this rate it will outlive all of us.

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  2. Hi can I recommend you take a look at pigbusiness.co.uk and get in touch

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  3. Thanks very much for sharing this. It is a great website and I will certainly use this film in my teaching. thanks for the tip.

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  4. What I find interesting is the extent these people are willing to go in order to lower their average total costs of production. Shows how money driven some people are!
    Adrian

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  5. This is a real eye opener and there has to be put an end to this ASAP. A) it is cruel for the animals to live in these circumstances and B) it pollutes our planet. I would much rather pay 50ct more for my meat knowing that it doesn't kill the planet and put the animals into agony. They should be closed down for their actions!

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  6. The conditions under which the animals are put are horrid; I read excerpts from "Eating Animals" to learn more about beef production (and food production generally), and was shocked. Scary, how much power such coorporations seem to have! No wonder the meat industry fears the spread of such information....

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  7. Wow, quite an interesting article Mr Doolan!

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  8. I'm not surprised at the lack of business ethics by Smithfield and national governments. With many government officials eating out of lobbyists laps, no wonder Smithfield hasn't been regulated severely. To force companies like Smithfield to have better production and waste management practices, a system overhaul is needed in which firms are punished for such horrible practices. Perhaps, if one of the Agriculture/ Food industry official fell sick due to fecal coli...

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  9. Have you seen the film Food Inc? It covers a lot of the issues around food production, but where I think it falls down is in leading the viewer to beleive that it is a US problem, whereas as you say, the problems are being exported across the world. It's appalling that we can treat animals with so little respect for their welfare, the environment or our health

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  10. I am an employee at the North carolina plant and I can assure you we are treated as poorly as the animals and the enviroment. Even with labor laws and the so called representatives from the Union, we still must work in untolerable conditions managed by tyrants and antagionist. Money talks. In this economy, Smithfeild doesn't care who walks!

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  11. Thank a million for leaving a comment. The conditions of the workers is an entire book in itself. I am so sorry to hear that you have to endure this. I can only wish you strength in order to deal with this. Best of luck.

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  12. What can we do to fix it? I am so appalled at the way animals and people are tortured in the U.S. so businesses can make a buck -- a lot of bucks -- at the expense of us, the environment, and animals. I am educating myself, I have become vegetarian, but I feel helpless to do anything about the over-arching problems. What can we do to end the reign of terror of companies like Smithfield?

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  13. Well, becoming a vegetarian is a good first step. Make yourself an example for others. Let companies know that you will not support them. Give books likes Eating Animals as gifts. Spread the word, without becoming a pain in the you know what. One needs to find a balance. But you've made the right choice. Good luck.

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