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Whole Foods Market tackles animal welfareDate posted: April 11, 2005![]() Anne Malleau speaks at the Livestock Care Conference, hosted by Alberta Farm Animal Care (AFAC) in Red Deer. The largest organic grocery store chain in North America has its sights set on new animal welfare requirements for meat suppliers - a move expected to help drive major animal welfare changes for the agriculture and food industry. Anne Malleau, Executive Director of the company's new Animal Compassion Foundation, discusses six key challenges to implementing standards. Austin-based Whole Foods Market is not your average food company. Start with its uncommon beginnings:
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What does this latest step mean for the future of livestock care standards in North America? Anne Malleau, Executive Director of Whole Foods Market's new Animal Compassion Foundation, discussed the company's animal welfare initiative at the recent Livestock Care Conference in Red Deer, hosted by Alberta Farm Animal Care (AFAC). She outlined six key challenges to developing enhanced standards. Six key challenges1. Ability to audit. "The most important thing is that we create standards that are based in science," says Malleau. "We want to make changes that are actually proven to be better for the animal - not just changes we think are better for the animal." In 2003, the company recruited experts and stakeholders as advisors in a process that led to the development of a 15-stage plan for setting up welfare standards for various species. It started with ducks and is now at stage 13 with that species. Whole Foods Market has also started work on swine, lamb and beef cattle, and plans to have standards in place for all species sold in its stores by 2008. "In developing these standards, we have brought in animal scientists for each species, animal rights organizations, animal welfare organizations, producers and a third party auditor," says Malleau. "At the end of the day, if you don't have something that you can audit, then you don't have anything." 2. Cost of production. A major challenge for any new standards that require producer participation is generating incentive at that level - a challenge that Whole Foods understands, says Malleau. "We recognize that welfare costs money. So with our new standards, the idea is that any producer that meets the standards will receive an additional premium, as a profit-sharing approach.' ![]() Susan Church, Manager of Alberta Farm Animal Care (AFAC). 3. Disease risk. Another important issue at the production level is disease risk, she says. "Once you start looking at alternative welfare systems, often you start having problems with disease initially. A perfect process requires having the right animal on the right system and the right feed - that takes some work and adjustments. When you take animals selected for intensive systems and then throw them into alternative systems, that doesn't always work." 4. Consumer willingness to pay. While Whole Foods Market believes in the market opportunity for the enhanced product line, it realizes establishing steady demand will take careful planning. "There are all sorts of consumers that are very supportive of higher standards, but it's well documented that what consumers say they want and what they're actually willing to pay for are often different," says Malleau. "I think we'll be able to get consumers to buy the product initially, but the challenge is to get them to do that frequently and on a steady basis." 5. Producer adoption. At the end of the day, everything depends on producer adoption, she acknowledges. "We need producers who are willing to try new things, and as a company we need to be prepared to help them through some of the issues that arise in setting new standards." 6. Constant improvement. Blazing a new trail is one thing, but Malleau emphasizes that long-term success depends on ongoing improvement. "At the end of this first set of standards, we don't expect to that we're going to have the answers to everything. But we're committed to continuous improvement and having these standards as a living document." Related storiesMore information on the Livestock Care Conference is available in these stories:
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