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Open letter urges world leaders to end factory farming

News Section Icon Published 17/11/2022

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Today (17th November), many of our High Profile Supporters and Visionaries have lent their names to an international open letter calling on world leaders at the COP27 climate conference to end factory farming and transform our global food system.

The open letter – signed by over 200 prominent individuals including Brian Cox, Chris Packham, Jane Goodall and Dame Joanna Lumley – has been released on Solutions Day at the conference in Egypt.

Urgent action needed

The letter highlights the urgent need to transform our global food system and calls on world leaders to urgently take action and deliver a global agreement on food and farming.

The letter states:

The livestock sector produces more greenhouse gases than the direct emissions of all the world’s planes, trains and cars combined. Without urgent action, intensive animal agriculture threatens our very survival. We need a food transformation. Our people, animals and planet cannot wait any longer.

Voices of support

Some 208 people from around the world have signed the letter, including: 

  • Hollywood actors Brian Cox, Alan CummingSteve Coogan and Eva Green
  • British TV personalities Chris Packham, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and Dr Amir Khan GP and actors Dame Joanna Lumley, Kate Ford and Peter Egan
  • Award-winning authors Michael Morpurgo and Barbara Kingsolver
  • Religious leaders Bishop John Arnold, Bishop of Salford, Chair of CAFOD and Rabbi David Rosen CBE, International President, The World Conference on Religion and Peace 
  • Eminent experts Jane Goodall, PhD, DBE, Founder - the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace, Frans B. M. de Waal, Ph. D., C. H. Candler Professor Emeritus, Primate Behaviour, Emory University, Peter Singer, AC Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics Princeton University and Carl Safina, PHD, President, The Safina Center, Endowed Professor for Nature and Humanity, Stony Brook University
  • Business leaders Dale Vince OBE, owner of green electricity company Ecotricity and Julian Richer.

End of the Line

This week we launched our End of the Line for Factory Farming campaign, the new global movement dedicated to ending this cruel and unnecessary practice. The campaign aims to get a global agreement to end factory farming and transform our global food system so that it benefits people, animals and the planet. We released new YouGov research showing that almost two thirds of people (63%) in 13 countries polled believe factory farming puts profits ahead of climate and environment.

Stage, TV and film actor, Alan Cumming OBE FRSE, known for roles in The Good Wife and X-Men 2, said: "The amount of human edible food we produce just to feed the animals we slaughter for meat is beyond wasteful – especially when millions of people around the world go hungry every day. We need a food system that is fair, kind and sustainable. That’s why I’m supporting Compassion in World Farming’s End of the Line for Factory Farming campaign - to help change this broken system once and for all."

A clear message

Dr Nick Palmer, Head of our UK office, added: "This is the first campaign action from the new End of the Line for Factory Farming global movement dedicated to ending this cruel and unnecessary practice as it’s causing a climate and nature emergency – one third of global warming is driven by food production and consumption.

"Our open letter sends a clear message to world leaders highlighting the urgent need for action. It’s quite simple – without ending factory farming and transforming our food system, it will be impossible to meet climate targets. What’s needed is for world leaders to put forward a global agreement that meets our climate and SDG commitments before it’s too late."

Take action

Be one of the first to sign our petition and tell world leaders to deliver a United Nations Global Agreement to transform the future of our food.

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If you have any further questions regarding this, or any other matter, please get in touch with us at supporters@ciwf.org.uk. We aim to respond to all queries within two working days. However, due to the high volume of correspondence that we receive, it may occasionally take a little longer. Please do bear with us if this is the case. Alternatively, if your query is urgent, you can contact our Supporter Engagement Team on +44 (0)1483 521 953 (lines open Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm).