We can rethink our landscapes and allow farmed animals to experience the joy of living
Getting up close and personal with a hot and richly fermenting cowpat in Idaho, USA may not be everyone’s idea of a good time.
LOOKING TO A BRIGHTER FUTURE
Dr Tracey Jones, Global Director of Food Business at Compassion in World Farming, shares the award winners and her thoughts, following the annual Good Farm Animal Welfare Awards in London.
Another World Is Possible: Ending Live Exports
Tomorrow is Ban Live Exports: International Awareness Day, an opportunity to shine a light on the terrible cruelty endured by millions of cattle, pigs, sheep and other animals when they are transported long distances, often across continents, in horrific conditions.
WHY BEE-LOVING BRITS ARE KEY TO SAVING BELLWETHERS OF THE NATURAL WORLD
Shadows from a nuclear power station cast jagged shapes across one of Europe’s most impressive spans of shingle. Sand and marram grass stretch as far as the eye can see.
Collective Action For Our Oceans: From Nairobi to Stockholm to Lisbon and Onwards
Never has it been more important to protect our Oceans and on World Oceans Day, I am honoured and delighted to introduce Leticia Carvalho from the United Nations Environment Programme as my special blog guest.
Bees, the ambassadors of the natural world, have an important message for humanity
Shadows from a nuclear power station cast jagged shapes across one of Europe’s most impressive spans of shingle.
WAR, WANT AND WASTE
What Conflict in Ukraine Tells Us About Food Shortages? These are deeply chilling times with the war in Ukraine and the enormous impact it is having on all affected.
‘Apocalyptic’ global food crisis is being exacerbated by factory farming of grain-fed animals
These are deeply chilling times with the war in Ukraine and the enormous impact it is having on all affected.
Farming intensification has hit barn owls hard, but it doesn’t have to be this way
High above a hilltop woodland, shapes were dancing in the darkening sky, like giant butterflies. There were about 40 of them, a silent flurry of swirling wings and tails.