24 December, 2019
Sows stand in gestation crates, on a pig farm in Aragon. Sows in such crates remain completely immobilized during the first four weeks of pregnancy. The reason given is that some sows are aggressive during this period and the crates prevent fighting. In October 2020, the European Citizens’ Initiative handed the European Commission a petition signed by more than 1.5 million citizens, calling for a ban on caged farming.
Spain is one of the four largest global exporters of pork, alongside Germany, the US, and Denmark. The European Union as a whole consumes around 20 million tons of pork annually, and exports some 13 percent of its total production, mostly to East Asia, in particular to China. An EU-funded campaign, Let’s Talk About Pork, has been launched in Spain, France, and Portugal, giving its objective as a drive to counter fake claims surrounding meat production and the consumption of pork in Europe, and to demonstrate that the sector meets the highest standards of sustainability, biosecurity, and food safety in the world. Such standards include guarantees that animals do not suffer pain, and that they have enough space to move freely. Animal rights groups, on the other hand, argue that such practices as routine tail-docking and narrow gestation crates for sows constitute animal abuse, and that animal pain and suffering is widespread. Animal rights investigators say that the industry makes access to farms difficult, and that they are compelled to gain access to such facilities covertly, often at night, in order to document what happens inside. These photographs were taken on a number of such incursions, on different dates, at various facilities across Spain.
Aitor Garmendia
Aitor Garmendia is a photographer focused on documenting the lives of exploited and liberated non-human animals. Through reports and graphic investigations that portray ...