|
(Don't read if you have a weak stomach)
The Dark Side of Recycling - Rendering Plants
from Earth Island Journal
"The rendering plant floor is piled high with ’raw product’:
thousands of dead dogs and cats; heads and hooves from cattle, sheep, pigs and
horses; whole skunks; rats and raccoons --all waiting to be processed. In the
90-degree heat, the piles of dead animals seem to have a life of their own as
millions of maggots swarm over the carcasses.
"Two bandanna-masked men begin operating Bobcat mini-dozers, loading the
‘raw’ into a 10-foot-deep stainless-steel pit. They are undocumented workers
from Mexico, doing a dirty job. A giant auger-grinder at the bottom of the pit
begins to turn. Popping bones and squeezing flesh are sounds from a nightmare
you will never forget.
"Rendering is the process of cooking raw animal material to remove the
moisture and fat. The rendering plant works like a giant kitchen. The cooker, or
‘chef,’ blends the raw product in order to maintain a certain ratio between
the carcasses of pets, livestock, poultry waste and supermarket rejects.
"Once the mass is cut into small pieces, it is transported to another
auger for fine shredding. It is then cooked at 280 degrees for one hour. The
continuous batch cooking process goes on non-stop 24 hours a day, seven days a
week as meat is melted away from bones in the hot 'soup.’ During this cooking
process, the soup produces a fat of yellow grease or tallow that rises to the
top and is skimmed off. The cooked meat and bone are sent to a hammermill press,
which squeezes out the remaining moisture and pulverizes the product into a
gritty powder. Shaker screens sift out excess hair and large bone chips. Once
the batch is finished, all that is left is yellow grease, meal and bone meal.
"As the American Journal of Veterinary Research explains, this recycled
meat and bone meal is used as ‘a source of protein and other nutrients in the
diets of poultry and swine and in pet foods, with lesser amounts used in the
feed of cattle and sheep. Animal fat is also used in animal feeds as an energy
source.’ Every day, hundreds of rendering plants across the United States
truck millions of tons of this ‘food enhancer’ to poultry ranches, cattle
feed-lots, dairy and hog farms, fish-feed plants and pet-food manufacturers
where it is mixed with other ingredients to feed the billions of animals that
meat-eating humans, in turn, will eat.
"Rendering plants have different specialties. The labeling designation
of a particular ‘run’ of product is defined by the predominance of a
specific animal. Some product-label names are: meat meal, meat by-products,
poultry meal, poultry by-products, fish meal, fish oil, yellow grease, tallow,
beef fat and chicken fat.
"Rendering plants perform one of the most valuable functions on Earth:
they recycle used animals. Without rendering, our cities would run the risk of
becoming filled with diseased and rotting carcasses. Fatal viruses and bacteria
would spread uncontrolled through the population.
"Death is the number one commodity in a business where the demand for
feed ingredients far exceeds the supply of raw product. But this elaborate
system of food production through waste management has evolved into a recycling
nightmare. Rendering plants are unavoidably processing toxic waste.
"The dead animals (the ‘raw’) are accompanied by a whole menu of
unwanted ingredients. Pesticides enter the rendering process via poisoned
livestock, and fish oil laced with bootleg DDT and other organophosphates that
have accumulated in the bodies of West Coast mackerel and tuna.
"Because animals are frequently shoved into the pit with flea collars
still attached organophosphate-containing insecticides get into the mix as well.
The insecticide Dursban arrives in the form of cattle insecticide patches.
Pharmaceuticals leak from antibiotics in livestock, and euthanasia drugs given
to pets are also included. Heavy metals accumulate from a variety of sources:
pet ID tags, surgical pins and needles.
"Even plastic winds up going into the pit. Unsold supermarket meats,
chicken and fish arrive in styrofoam trays and shrink wrap. No one has time for
the tedious chore of unwrapping thousands of rejected meat-packs. More plastic
is added to the pits with the arrival of cattle ID tags, plastic insecticide
patches and the green plastic bags containing pets from veterinarians.
"Skyrocketing labor costs are one of the economic factors forcing the
corporate flesh-peddlers to cheat. It is far too costly for plant personnel to
cut off flea collars or unwrap spoiled T-bone steaks. Every week, millions of
packages of plastic-wrapped meat go through the rendering process and become one
of the unwanted ingredients in animal feed.
"The most environmentally conscious state in the nation is California,
where spot checks and testing of animal-feed ingredients happen at the wobbly
rate of once every two-and-a-half months. The supervising state agency is the
Department of Agriculture's Feed and Fertilizer Division of Compliance. Its main
objective is to test for truth in labeling: does the percentage of protein,
phosphorous and calcium match the rendering plant's claims; do the percentages
meet state requirements? However, testing for pesticides and other toxins in
animal feeds is incomplete.
"In California, eight field inspectors regulate a rendering industry
that feeds the animals that the state's 30 million people eat. When it comes to
rendering plants, however, state and federal agencies have maintained a
hands-off policy, allowing the industry to become largely self-regulating. An
article in the February 1990 issue of Render, the industry's national magazine,
suggests that the self-regulation of certain contamination problems is not
working.
"One policing program that is already off to a shaky start is the
Salmonella Education/Reduction Program, formed under the auspices of the
National Renderers Association. The magazine states that ‘...unless US and
Canadian renderers get their heads out of the ground and demonstrate that they
are serious about reducing the incidence of salmonella contamination in their
animal protein meals, they are going to be faced with...new and overly stringent
government regulations.’
"So far, the voluntary self-testing program is not working. According to
the magazine, ‘...only about 20 per cent of the total number of companies
producing or blending animal protein meal have signed up for the program...’
Far fewer have done the actual testing.
"The American Journal of Veterinary Research conducted an investigation
into the persistence of sodium pentobarbital
in the carcasses of euthanized animals at a typical rendering plant in 1985 and found ‘... virtually no
degradation of the drug occurred during this conventional rendering process...’
and that ‘...the potential of other chemical contaminants (e.g., heavy metals,
pesticides and environmental toxicants, which may cause massive herd
mortalities) to degrade during conventional rendering needs further evaluation.’
"Renderers are the silent partners in our food chain. But worried
insiders are beginning to talk, and one word that continues to come up in
conversation is ‘pesticides.’ The possibility of petrochemically poisoning
our food has become a reality. Government agencies and the industry itself are
allowing toxins to be inadvertently recycled from the streets and supermarket
shelves into the food chain. As we break into a new decade of increasingly
complex pollution problems, we must rethink our place in the environment. No
longer hunters, we are becoming the victims of our technologically altered food
chain.
"The possibility of petrochemically poisoning our food has become a
reality."
That article is one of the most disgusting things we have ever read.
"In the U.S., plants process billions of pounds of protein from dead
cows, sheep, pigs, chickens and other animals into animal feed each year.
Farmer Carter doesn’t mention this, but reporters Satchell and Hedges do:
"Chicken manure often contains campylobacter and salmonella bacteria, which
can cause disease in humans, as well as intestinal parasites, veterinary drug
residues, and toxic heavy metals such as arsenic, lead, cadmium, and mercury.
These bacteria and toxins are passed on to the cattle and can be cycled to
humans who eat beef contaminated by feces during slaughter."
If they’re not being fed on rendered by-products or chicken manure,
according to the Satchell and Hedges article, "Animal-feed manufacturers
and farmers also have begun using or trying out dehydrated food garbage, fats
emptied from restaurant fryers and grease traps, cement-kiln dust, even
newsprint and cardboard that are derived from plant cellulose. Researchers in
addition have experimented with cattle and hog manure, and human sewage sludge.
New feed additives are being introduced so fast, says Daniel McChesney, head of
animal-feed safety for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, that the
government cannot keep pace with new regulations to cover them."
Cattle and hog manure and human sewage sludge as possible foods for the
animals eaten by human beings.
Words fail me.
Additional Reading:
The
“Dirty Little Secret” the Pet Food Companies NEVER Want you to Find Out About!
|