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ENVIRONMENT

Amid global climate breakdown, French farmer bets on chicken

Chicken has the smallest carbon footprint of any meat. But contrary to the claims of a poultry farmer in Brittany, scientists say we should still be eating less.

A French poultry farmer has suggested that chickens may provide the answer to solving the climate crisis.
A French poultry farmer has suggested that chickens may provide the answer to solving the climate crisis. (Photo by Damien MEYER / AFP)

Stephane Dahirel doesn’t exactly say eat chicken and save the planet, but that is what he’s hinting at as he opens a shed door at his intensive farm in Brittany, western France.

The 90,000 “broilers” — chickens bred for their meat — flapping around inside his three sheds, will more than triple in size in less than a month and their meat will have a low carbon footprint.

“The objective is to produce the best meat possible, in the least amount of time, with the least amount of food,” Dahirel said.

The two million snow-white chickens he produces every year — bred mostly for McDonald’s nuggets — will reach their slaughter weight in less than half the time it takes on a traditional farm. 

At 20 days they already weigh one kilo (two pounds) — 20 times heavier than at birth. By the time they are slaughtered at 45 days, they will weigh over three kilos.

Chicken has the smallest carbon footprint of any meat, according to the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO).

Their latest figures reveal that chicken generates on average less than one kilo of CO2 equivalent per kilo of meat — pork is responsible for three times that amount, while beef produces 52 times the emissions thanks to cows’ potent methane burps.   

Dahirel insisted that intensive farming is “the most efficient and rational system” for producing meat “from an economical and ecological perspective”. 

Animal welfare

But there are big drawbacks too. Despite the low emissions he claims for his chickens, producing the grain to feed them requires large amounts of land, synthetic fertilisers and pesticides.

All have effects on biodiversity and water quality. Indeed green algae blooms on beaches in Dahirel’s native Brittany — partly caused by intensive pork, poultry and dairy production — has caused an environmental outcry and been linked to several deaths.

Intensive farming is also in the dock on animal well-being.

Dahirel raises 20 chickens per square metre (20 chickens per 10 square feet), which are kept on a litter where droppings are absorbed by wood shavings and buckwheat hulls. 

Sick or abnormal chickens are killed to avoid further suffering and because the automated slaughterhouse requires a homogenous product.

“They are not robots of course, but we’re looking for homogeneity,” the farmer said from his veranda overlooking one of his three sheds, covered in solar panels.

We must ‘eat less meat’

Chickens may be an optimal animal protein for carbon emissions, but not necessarily for nature, experts say.

“If we think only in terms of CO2 emissions per kilo of meat, we’d all start eating chicken. But thinking that’s the solution would be a massive mistake,” said Pierre-Marie Aubert, of France’s IDDRI sustainable development think tank.

“If you only think in terms of carbon, a heap of things would backfire on us in the long run,” he added.

Aubert said there had been a “crazy” rise in consumption of chicken in recent years, making it one of the most widely consumed meats in the world, with none of the religious and cultural taboos associated with pork and beef.

The world has become so focused on methane emissions from ruminants like cattle and sheep “that many people think substituting beef with chicken is enough, but really, we need to reduce all meat consumption,” said Lucile Rogissart, of the Institute for Climate Economics (I4CE).

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ENVIRONMENT

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

Winemakers in the famous French Bordeaux wine region fear the weather conditions this spring may lead to a disastrous harvest.

Why Bordeaux wine is under threat in France this year

It’s the second year in a row that mildew has threatened Bordeaux vines. Around 90 percent of vineyards were affected by mildew to some extent in 2023, according to the regional chamber of agriculture.

But this year, the fungus has appeared earlier than usual. “If the weather continues, it’s going to be a disaster,” one vineyard owner told regional newspaper Sud Ouest, as mildew threatens crops. “I’ve never seen mildew strike so early.”

In its latest plant bulletin, the Gironde Chamber of Agriculture underlines the “favourable climatic conditions for [mildew] development” and is pessimistic for the coming days, fearing an increase in potential risk.

In the end, the 2023 harvest was reasonable, helped by favourable August weather – though a heatwave towards the end of the month raised concerns over working conditions.

READ MORE: France to revise its Champagne-making area due to climate change

But last year’s outbreak and the weather so far in 2024 has brought the ‘mildew season’ forward in parts of the region. The Grand Libournais and Graves winegrowing areas are particularly affected, according to May’s Bulletin de Santé du Végétal for Nouvelle Aquitaine.

Winegrowers in the Blayais region, meanwhile, have noticed that mildew spread is erratic – but the expected return of rainy conditions in the early part of next week have prompted concerns that the fungus’s spread will only increase.

“There are abandoned plots, neighbours who haven’t pruned their vines or estates that have been unable to carry out an uprooting program because of the incessant rain,” one vineyard owner said.

Official figures suggest that some 2,000 hectares of vines are uncultivated in the Gironde alone. The Fédération Départementale des Syndicats d’Exploitants Agricoles insists that the real figure is much larger – with implications for the health of neighbouring cultivated vines.

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