ADM and Carrefour among businesses ramping up cage-free food calls

The renewed calls follow the publication of the EU’s Strategic Dialogue on the Future of EU Agriculture​ this month, recommending an end to caged farming by 2026.

Critics however slammed the report, labelling it a “political delay” tactic to gain favour with voters during elections.

Over 1.4m European citizens had signed the End the Cage Age initiative, making it clear many consumers don’t believe in caged farming, said the UK’s animal welfare campaign group Compassion in World Farming (CIWF).

What food animals are kept in cages?

Businesses are phasing out cages but 300m farm animals remain caged across the EU, including 40% of laying hens; 90% of farmed ducks; 94% of farmed rabbits; and 96% of breeding sows.

“Carrefour’s cage-free eggs initiative is part of our approach to protect the welfare of farm animals, and its goal is to support customers in making the right food choices. That is why we also support the introduction of an EU-wide ban on cages for laying hens,” said a Carrefour spokesperson.

Over 1,400 commitments among Europe’s leading food and drink businesses have been made for cage-free laying hens, 800 of which have been fulfilled, said CIWF’s cage-free report​.

This is being driven by rising consumer demand for better animal welfare in food production, with 94% of EU citizens believing animals should have more space and 89% stating farm animals should not be kept in individual cages.

“It is encouraging to see an increasing number of food companies across the European Union voluntarily phasing out cages in their supply chain,” said CIWF global CEO Philip Lymbery.

Country

Laying hens

Sows

Rabbits

Austria

Cages banned since 2020

Dry sow stalls limited to 10 days since 2013
Farrowing crates banned from temporary six-day crating from 2033

Banned since 2012

Belgium

Cages banned by 2028

Banned for meat rabbits since 2016.
Banned for does from 2025

Czech Republic

Cages banned from 2027

Denmark

88.8% cage-free 

Dry sow stalls limited to 3 days

Finland

Up to 5 day confinement for farrowing sows

France

New cage systems banned since 2018

Germany

Banned from 2026/96.2% cage-free

Dry sow stalls banned by 2028
Farrowing sows banned from 2035 with 5-day temporary crating

Barren cages banned from 2025

Luxembourg

Cage-free

Netherlands

89.9 cage-free

Dry sow stalls limited to 4 days since 2013

Barren cages banned since 2016
60-70% of meat rabbits are cage-free

Slovenia

82.8% cage-free

Sweden

97.3% cage-free

Dry sow stalls banned in 1994
Farrowing sow crates banned since 1987

Phase out cages in farming

“As a matter of urgency, the European Commission must honour its commitment and present a legislative proposal to phase out the use of cages for all farmed species as soon as possible.”

Caged animals across the EU in numbers:

  • 155m laying hens (40%)
  • 72m rabbits (94%)
  • 30m ducks (90%)
  • 10m breeding sows (96%)
  • Tens-of-millions of other animals, including quail, pullets and dairy calves

Scientists have also lent their support to campaigning businesses seeking to stamp out caged food production but point out the need for a timeline to ensure producers can put measures in place ahead of a ban.

“Citizens are demanding change,” said CIWF global director of food business Dr Tracey Jones. “Businesses are proving that large-scale cage-free farming is not only achievable, but the right thing to do – for their customers, their brand and the animals in their supply chain.

“With the future of cages hanging in the balance, producers need clarity on timescales, system requirements and transition support.”

20 food and beverage companies leading the call for cage-free production:

  • ADM
  • Aldi
  • Barilla
  • Biedronka
  • BreFood
  • Carrefour
  • Fattoria Roberti
  • Ferrero
  • Fumagalli
  • Ikea
  • Jamie Oliver ltd
  • Jeronimo Martins
  • Kaufland
  • Lapin & Bien
  • Les Mousquetaires
  • Mondelez International
  • Nestlé
  • The Compleat Food Group
  • Unilever
  • Zon Varken