This is a crosspost from my Substack: https://themarginalhour.substack.com/p/welfare-maxxing-donations-or-high
I found this draft sitting in the depths of my Obsidian vault, and thought Iâd finish it up and post it!
Epistemic status: low, uncertain if this is accurate. Keen to hear feedback.
If you canât/donât want to be vegan, is it better to eat the cheapest, potentially most unethical animal produce and donate what you save, or is better to buy expensive, potentially higher welfare animal produce. Iâll focus on broiler chickens in this post.
Iâll explore:
33 chickens/year = 8.5 servings/week * 52 weeks/year = 442 servings/year
Interestingly, this amounts to 4,820kg of CO2 emissions. If youâre interested in the tradeoffs between choosing more environmentally friendly meat, and âsuffering friendlyâ meat (as in less suffering, not really friendly at all), then Which meat to eat: COâ vs Animal suffering is good[1]. This extract summarises it quite well:
For those of you who are having trouble weighing the two against one another, consider this: When choosing between, e.g, chicken and beef, youâre effectively choosing between creating the equivalent of 89 kg more COâ (with beef) or the equivalent of 26 days more torture (with chicken). To put this into context, a campfire produces about 10 kg of COâ. Would you rather make 9 campfires or start torturing for 26 days? Are people who have a hearth morally equivalent to people who torture every day? Or what about a candle? It produces 0,01 kg of COâ. Is lighting a candle worse than torturing an animal for a couple minutes?
The Better Chicken Commitment is a policy that pushes for slower growing breeds, lower stocking density, and better welfare in general.
Some of the things it pushes for are:
Side note: recently 18 brands dropped their BCC, including popular restaurants such as Burger King, KFC, Nandos, Wagamamas, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, Frankie & Bennyâs, Wingstop, Popeyes, and more. They claim to have a Sustainable Chicken Forum, but this is welfare-washing.
E.g. Lidl, Aldi
Aldi: 650g = ÂŁ4.49 -> ÂŁ6.91/kg. This provides around 4-5 servings. So, approximately 2kg of chicken bought per week, which is ÂŁ13.82.
E.g. Waitrose, M&S
M&S: 650g = ÂŁ9 -> ÂŁ13.85/kg. So for 2kg a week, this is ÂŁ27.70.
By going to Aldi instead of M&S, you save ÂŁ13.88.
Animal Charity Evaluators estimates that per dollar you can help 12 chickens (if donating to The Humane League). In GBP, this is 16 chickens per pound.
So by saving ÂŁ13.88 per week, you can help 222 chickens every week.
Simple. https://www.givingwhatwecan.org/pledge, or, https://www.farmkind.giving/compassion-calculator to work out the exact amount needed to âoffsetâ your diet.
Something seems especially weird about offsetting your purchase of non-BCC chicken by donating to campaigns to get supermarkets to adopt the BCC.
I think one important consideration missing here: supermarkets respond to campaigners by saying that customers want to buy non-BCC chicken, and they are just doing what their customers want. If you buy non-BCC chicken from them, you make that argument stronger, and the campaigners' argument weaker.
And I don't think this is necessarily a negligible concern in comparison to the other effects being discussed here, since the mechanism for how your small donation is supposed to help chickens is also by tipping the scales on some corporate campaign and getting a company like a supermarket to make a big change.