McDonald's sets new welfare standards for chickens
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[October 28, 2017]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - McDonald's Corp will
require suppliers to follow new standards for raising and slaughtering
chickens served in its restaurants, the company said on Friday, the
latest changes affecting popular menu items like McNuggets.
Animal activists said the mandates fall short of commitments made by
other restaurants, such as Burger King and sandwich chain Subway, and
failed to address their primary concern about chicken production: birds
bred to grow quickly to large sizes.
Under McDonald's updated guidelines, suppliers such as Tyson Foods Inc
and Cargill Inc [CARG.UL] must comply by 2024 with rules dictating the
amount and brightness of light in chicken houses, provide birds with
access to perches that promote natural behavior, and take other steps to
improve animal welfare.
The world's largest restaurant chain by revenue also pledged to conduct
trials with suppliers to measure the wellbeing of different chicken
breeds.
"I think it's one of the most comprehensive programs that I've seen for
chickens," said livestock researcher Temple Grandin, who pioneered
humane slaughterhouse practices and works with McDonald's.
The treatment of animals in the food chain has become increasingly
important to some consumers in recent years as animal welfare groups
have released undercover videos showing abuse at U.S. facilities,
including those associated with Tyson.
McDonald's requirements are the latest changes to affect its menu that
address concerns about animal and human health. It previously stopped
buying chicken meat for U.S. restaurants from birds raised with
antibiotics deemed important to human health and said it would shift to
using cage-free eggs in the U.S and Canada.
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The logo of a McDonald's Corp restaurant
is seen in Los Angeles, California, U.S. October 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Such moves generally raise costs for producers.
McDonald's, which has been working to boost flagging traffic at its U.S.
restaurants, said it will not raise menu prices as a result of its new
standards.
"While this might not be a direct impact on sales at McDonald's, it might help
certain segments of our customer base make purchasing decisions that they might
not have otherwise made," Bruce Feinberg, a senior director for McDonald's, said
about the requirements.
Tyson and Cargill supported McDonald's moves.
However, animal welfare groups said the chain failed by not committing to buying
meat from breeds that grow slowly enough to protect chickens' health. Birds bred
to grow more quickly can suffer organ failure and struggle to walk because they
become too heavy, they said.
"McDonald's at this point is allowing the industry to continue in this inhumane
direction," said Josh Balk, a vice president for The Humane Society of the
United States.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Sandra Maler)
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