4.7 Article

The environmental footprints of the feeds used by the EU chicken meat industry

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 886, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163960

Keywords

Multiple sustainability assessment; Chicken meat; Farm to fork strategy targets; Material flow analysis; Interlinkages and trade-offs; Supply chain sustainability

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Chicken meat production in the EU has significant environmental impacts due to feed consumption. A shift towards poultry meat increases the demand for chicken feeds and its associated environmental burden. Analysis shows that cropland use increased by 17% from 2007 to 2018, while CO2 emissions linked to feed demand decreased by about 45%. The EU chicken meat industry needs to address policy gaps to achieve sustainability targets.
Chicken meat production in the European Union (EU) causes environmental pressures within and beyond the EU, mostly due to feed consumption. The expected dietary shift from red to poultry meat will drive changes in the demand for chicken feeds and the associated environmental impacts, calling for a renewed attention on this supply chain. By performing a break-down analysis based on material flow accounting, this paper assesses the annual environmental burden caused within and outside of the EU by each single feed consumed by the EU chicken meat industry from 2007 to 2018. The increased feed demand required to support the growth of the EU chicken meat industry over the analyzed period caused a 17 % increase in cropland use -6.7 million hectares in 2018. Instead, CO2 emissions linked to feed demand decreased by similar to 45 % over the same period. Despite an overall improvement in resource and impact intensity, chicken meat production was not decoupled from environmental burden. In 2018, 0.40 Mt. of nitrogen, 0.28 Mt. of phosphorous, and 0.28 Mt. of potassium inorganic fertilizers were implied. Our findings indicate that the sector is not yet compliant with the EU sustainability targets defined in the Farm To Fork Strategy, calling for an urgent need to fill existing policy implementation gaps. The EU chicken meat industry's environmental footprints were driven by endogenous factors such as the feed use efficiency at the chicken farming stage and the feed cultivation efficiency within the EU, as well as by exogenous factors such as the import of feed via international trade. Limitations on the use of alternative feed sources, as well as the exclusion of the imports from the EU legal framework constitute a crucial gap, which hamper fully leveraging existing solutions.

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