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  • Here in the States,

  • I've already seen how they do intensive farming on a huge scale.

  • In the next 40 years, we'll have 9 billion people on this planet.

  • We have to make as much food as we have made since the beginning of time.

  • and I've seen from the air, how another farm does it even bigger.

  • Each of these sheds has got about 3,000 cows in it, and there's 10 units spread out across this farm,

  • makes my farm look like an allotment.

  • Now it's time to see it close up.

  • Well, seeing that farm from the air was absolutely extraordinary.

  • I've now got an hour's long drive to find out what happens on ground level.

  • The farm I am about to visit has managed to turn intensive farming into a tourist attraction.

  • Fair Oaks Farm Park receives 500,000 visitors every year.

  • They come to see the 32,000 cows which produce more than 2 million pints of milk every day.

  • 25 barns, most of them are 1/4 mile long, are spread over a 17,000 acre site.

  • How can you possibly look after 32,000 cows?

  • I mean, that's a lot of animals to look after, isn't it?

  • Yes, we have 32,000 cows, but every cow is an individual.

  • In a computer record, we know everything about that cow,

  • when she had a calf, when she had a cough, whatever.

  • These cows are under 24 hour observation.

  • We have 450 workers that are looking after their welfare along with our veterinarians.

  • and so, we invite the public to come in, see what we do,

  • measure us againstdo they think we're taking care of our cows.

  • A farm of this size must have a big environmental impact.

  • Well, yeah, the potential environmental impact that we think we've taken that off the page.

  • We collect 100% of our manure every day in huge vacuum cleaners that all goes to anaerobic digesters,

  • and it creates a renewable energy source.

  • so 100% of our power is poo power.

  • A farm this size can produce enough electricity to power 8,000 homes.

  • In addition it's a 58% methane gas. We can scrub that make it 100% methane. Now, that's natural gas.

  • And we run all of our trucks off a compressed natural gas.

  • Do you think this is industrial farming that is very much a factory for the cows?

  • Are they prisoners of their own labour?

  • Well, certainly we don't feel that way.

  • In terms of our love of dairy, and our love of farming, and our family involvement,

  • to us, it's just a family farm,

  • and we happen to grow it a little larger than the guy down the road.

  • And if you think that farming on this scale might not be heading for the UK, then think again.

  • These british farmers are visiting Fair Oaks, to see what they can learn from intensive farming.

  • What we've seen in this trip today is that, you can look after cows, in a very favorable way in large numbers.

  • and something that we've come here to see how the Americans look after a large number of cows.

  • We've got so much to learn from them, from a management point of view,

  • That's the whole reason we are over here, really.

  • And I think the management and welfare standards are so good,

  • because they are big, they can't get away with anything less.

  • Really, I'm trying and learn from these guys

  • and see if we can implement their management techniques in our farms.

  • Despite its size, Fair Oaks has encountered little opposition from locals.

  • But that's not the case for all huge farming operations.

  • This dairy farm is the biggest in Wisconsin.

  • It has 8,000 cows and it's a similar size to the one proposed in Nocton in Lincolnshire.

  • Since it opened 2 years ago, it has been causing a stink with some of the neighbors.

  • So what sort of problems have you been experiencing?

  • I've had a number of neighbors contact me,

  • and a described symptoms of pounding headaches, migraines and new symptoms of asthma,

  • just since the dairy has been in operation.

  • So, it's the slurry, the smell?

  • It's actually, I call it the stench. It's more than a smell.

  • and when it hits you, it overpowers you.

  • If you think about the chemicals that are causing the odor,

  • it's HAM: hydrogen sulphide, ammonia, and methane, all being released. They are all toxic gases,

  • and you certainly don't want to breathe them in.

  • They would be regulated if it were ordinary industry.

  • so, what advice would you give to the people in the UK who may end up with these mega dairies next to them?

  • I think that if you have a sense of ethics, and moral responsibility to the future generation,

  • then you will do everything you can to prevent the spread of industrial size mega farms.

  • The number of dairies in the US like this one with 2,000+ cows has tripled in the last 10 years,

  • whilst the number of small farms has nearly halved.

  • Those who run these massive farms though, say welfare hasn't suffered and they are more heavily policed.

  • We have probably been the most regulated dairy ever. We follow a 4,000 page document, if you will.

  • It tells us when we can spread, where we can spread, how much we can spread.

  • Obviously, it's cow manure, and it's going to smell once in a while.

  • and the smell, you know, they claimed that there's smells of sulphur,

  • it gets to the back of your throat, and they've got to stay in their houses.

  • Is there any way you can work with them and help them?

  • We work with some of our neighbors. We've had neighbors come to say,

  • Hey, we are going to have family reunion, Can you make sure that you don't spread near our houses?

  • then we say, "No problem. We won't spread near your house that day."

  • It's a difficult balance.

  • These farmers don't want to fall out with their neighbors,

  • but of course, they do want to make money.

  • Dairying isn't the only type of farming that can cause an environmental impact, there's pig farming, too.

  • I have got a few pigs at home, but nothing like what's planned for Derbyshire,

  • where they are hoping to set up the biggest pig farm in the UK.

  • So while I'm over here, I'm going to meet up an American guy,

  • who is going to tell me all about what they call, the hog industry.

  • Malcolm DeKryger is vice president of a company which own 12,000 sows,

  • and produce 140,000 pigs for slaughter every year.

  • Sales total $25,000,000 or £16,000,000.

  • Big, big business in anybody's money.

  • emThese sows are in 16cm wide stalls, for about 8-10 weeks. They will be in this barn,

  • and we do the artificial semination in the breeding barn. They are in there for 6-7 weeks,

  • and then, they are coming here for about 8-9 weeks.

  • and so, they just keep moving barn to barn.

  • And so, they stand these stalls all their lives and they can never turn around?

  • emThey can walk out and turn around, when they go to the next place.

  • In the mean time, they are very comfortable and contented.

  • Some people would have a problem with this.

  • The pig being an intelligent animal, how do you feel about that?

  • The way that we measure contentedness and well being

  • emis not based on humans, because pigs are not humans.

  • Confined operations were put together for sake of the animal,

  • put together for the sake of human labour efficiency.

  • And, is this how to feed the world?

  • emAt this pointthis is a very effective way to produce a lot of pigs.

  • and being it's how pork is the protein of demand in the world

  • emit's the best way we know how, today.

  • She's getting a bit sunburnt, doesn't she? That one.

  • Having seen that big pig farm, I came away not very happy with the way that the pigs are kept,

  • but delighted, really, the laws in Europe, and particularly the UK,

  • don't allow us to keep pigs like that at home.

  • My trip across America has been an epic. And it's been a lot to take in.

  • I need time to digest everything that I've seen and heard a minute over.

  • but before I head home, I'll be back later in the programme to share my thoughts on whether we could,

  • or even should learn anything about farming from the Americans.

Here in the States,

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