- Welcome!
- 99%>
- about us>
- wake up call>
- consider>
- animal kill counter>
- animals ~ be a guardian not an owner
- animals and the catholic church
- Bill & Lou
- forgotten lessons of human-animal system
- Scientists declare: nonhuman animals are conscious ~ Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness from July 7, 2011
- Gandhi was vegetarian, whether you like it or not
- selective compassion >
- let compassion be your guide
- Vegan: more than a diet, more than a lifestyle
- animals' natural rights>
- universal declaration of animal rights
- ACTIONS by Occupy for Animals
- Our petitions to the EU (European Union)
- Europe's homeless animals>
- Europe's homeless animals - campaign
- EU, when do you think it is time to act?
- Tom Animalpastor in Brussels ~ Quo Vadis Europa?
- EU: make spaying and neutering compulsory!
- European tourist countries ~ the ugly truth
- Italy ~ the Mafia involved in shelter activities
- Sofia ~ Corruption and shady practices hinder the management of stray animals population
- Turkey intends to kill all stray animals
- the EU on animal welfare>
- animal cloning for food production in the EU
- Cosmetics: the final ban will come into force in March 2013 and no cosmetic products or ingredients will be allowed to be sold in the EU if tested on animals
- REACH ~ we have until 2018 to save up to 54 million animals from being poisoned and killed
- John Dalli denis his commitments regarding animal transports made publicly on June 7, 2012 after one week!
- MEPs demand an end to hotch-potch laws, with EU-wide measures to protect all animals
- MEP Tiziano Motti: "Europe should apply non-bloody solutions for strays" (Press Release)
- New EU-strategy fails to highlight benefits of animal welfare for animals and people
- Proposed animal tests for GM food and feed ignore science and are totally unnecessary
- Thousands of dogs and other animals spared cruel chemical tests in Europe
- European convention for the protection of pet animals
- written declaration on dog population management in the European Union
- News from Eurogroup for Animals>
- Tom Animalpastor will be at St Peter's Square on 4th of October 2013
- this & that>
- ACTA: The new threat to the net
- Stop PIPA & SOPA
- a message received and our answer concerning the 'traditional funeral ceremony' in Sumba Island, Indonesia
- Is there Racism in the Animal Rights movement?
- 80-year-old lady faces charges for feeding birds
- For the producers and management of 7 stars TV
- Who the heck is Rick Berman?
- famous activists>
- inspirational stories...>
- Act as if what you do makes a difference
- "Animals are our friends, not our food,” says Lo Hung-hsien (駱鴻賢), a former pork raiser
- Bella & Tara ~ real love and friendship knows no differences!
- Canelo ~ 12 years waiting for his friend
- Change comes with the children
- Gülümser, the miracle cat
- a homeless man, a dog, a cat... and a rat!
- Lucky's incredible fight for life
- Masrya's story
- Rats - the APOPO HeroRATS detect landmines and Tuberculosis
- The Witness
- The worlds' bravest mouse
- how children from Khalsa Montessori School in Arizona have helped dogs in Bosnia Herzegovina
- Masrya's story
- Video project
- 269
- International Global Consciousness Day ~ November 25
- all connected
- do you want to become extinct?>
- Study predicts imminent irreversible planetary collapse
- Arctic oil drilling
- Climate change rate could be faster than thought, study suggests>
- the global water crisis>
- Dead oceans, dead planet>
- Earth's lung ~ deforestation and the construction of the Belo Monte dam are destroying the Amazon
- Earth tipping point study in Nature Journal predicts disturbing and unpredictable changes
- in the era of Ecocide...
- Fukushima ~ the fate of Japan and the whole world depends on reactor No.4
- Oil sands, tar sands or, more technically, bituminous sands, are a GLOBAL threat
- UN urges global move to meat and dairy-free diet
- UN issues 'final wake-up call' on population and environment
- meat, the truth>
- are humans designed to eat meat?
- human starvation
- killing fields ~ the battle to feed factory farms
- Raising Resistance explores Latin American farmers’ struggle against the expanding production of genetically modified soy in South America
- meat consumption and the destruction of our planet>
- meat demand and deforestation
- meat production and water shortage>
- meat is murder? more like suicide!>
- factory farms>
- making the connection
- dangerous food>
- the Monsanto Monster>
- Study reveals that "safe" levels of Monsanto's GM corn and the chemical herbicide Roundup (glyphosate) are directly linked to causing cancerous tumors
- How GMO foods alter organ function and pose a very real health threat to humans
- Monsanto & The Genetic Conspiracy
- Huge victory against GMOs as Monsanto driven out of the UK by consumer protests
- animal cloning for food production in the EU
- A quarter of all burgers tainted with drug-resistant bacteria
- FDA admits chicken meat contains cancer-causing arsenic
- China ~ H7N9 bird flu virus had for the first time jumped from animals to humans
- Food Inc.
- MRSA found in British milk: Superbug strain can cause serious infections in humans and is resistant to antibiotics
- pesticide in agriculture ~ the slow poisoning of India
- GMO pig development gets $500,000 from USDA
- Enviropig - mouse and e coli genes injected into a Yorkshire pig embryo
- Rendering... the grotesque and disrespectful way we continue to exploit animals, objectify them and commodify them even in death
- You and your cat and Mad Cow Disease
- the Monsanto Monster>
- organic ~ the green revolution
- palm oil
- hurt an animal, hurt a child!>
- articles of interest>
- do you want to become extinct?>
- fashion
- alpaca
- angora
- cashmere
- down
- fur ~ general>
- fur ~ fur farms
- fur ~ fur traders & manufacturers
- fur ~ Karakul lambs don't live older than three days
- fur ~ fur is NOT green
- fur ~ fur free
- ban fur farms in the European Union
- ban fur farms in Sweden
- Kopenhagen Fur partnerships with Tivoli - Boycott them both!
- black bears – the source of fur for Britain's Royal Guards' caps
- seal hunt in Canada
- seal slaughter in Namibia>
- leather ~ general>
- shahtoosh
- shearling
- silk
- vicuña
- wool
- food
- ALL about meat (including petition)
- animal kill counter>
- from farm to fridge>
- factory farms - definition
- factory farming
- livestock auctions
- transportation>
- Australia ~ shocking new evidence of live export breaches>
- John Dalli denies his commitments regarding animal transports made publicly on June 7, 2012 after one week!
- Truck with 31 bulls stranded at the Bulgaria/Turkey border
- EU: report on animal transport successfully adopted in plenary
- Jill Phipps - tribute to a heroine
- slaughter
- ritual slaughter for halal and kosher meat >
- Ban religious slaughter throughout Europe
- The last moments of their life ~ an investigation by Elige Veganismo
- Rendering... the grotesque and disrespectful way we continue to exploit animals, objectify them and commodify them even in death
- You and your cat and Mad Cow Disease
- bushmeat
- cattle and cows>
- dog meat>
- elephant meat
- fish>
- goat milk
- horse >
- Kopi luwak or civet coffee
- lambs & sheep >
- pigs>
- pig business>
- Canada: Pig abuse exposed at pork supplier to major Canadian grocery stores
- Canada - about 1,300 weanlings were shot dead at Manitoba hog farm
- Thousands of dead pigs found in Shanghai river, China
- Shocking brutality at East Anglian Pig Co. revealed by Animal Equality
- Pigs brutally stabbed with swords on Spanish pig farm to supply leading UK Supermarket Morrisons
- Shocking cruelty inside Harling Farm (AJ Edwards & son) UK>
- Sickening scenes at Freedom Food Pig Farm
- Walmart's pork supplier exposed
- pig business>
- poultry>
- reindeer
- green turtles are considered a delicacy in Bali and are being smuggled and slaughtered under the disguise of ritual and religious purposes
- Killing for a living
- animals should be off the menu!
- The Emotional World of Farm Animals ~ a documentary
- articles of interest>
- Will the amendment to the Farm Bill introduced by Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) nullify laws against animal cruelty?
- Ag Gag Bill dead in Florida
- Five states now have 'Ag-Gag' laws on the books
- California's slaughterhouse law overturned by Supreme Court
- Farmers on red alert over outbreaks of new livestock disease
- more about food...>
- animal cloning for food production in the EU
- bugs as food?
- grow your own food
- mad cow disease has hit the U.S. (April 25, 2012)
- meat is murder? more like suicide!
- going vegetarian has never been easier
- why meat is addictive?
- why are you addicted to cheese?
- Swedish agricultural authorities are recommending a tax to reduce meat consumption and say such a levy should be adopted across the European Union
- U.S. vegan population doubles in only two years
- 'Italian & Vegan' ~ vegan alternatives to Italian food
- fun
- greed
- Earth's lung ~ deforestation and the construction of the Belo Monte dam are destroying the Amazon
- 'Art' ~ animals killed/used in the name of 'art'>
- bear baiting>
- bear bile farming *
- breeding *>
- corruption>
- Prihvatilište KS Prača, commonly known as ‘Praca’, is a dog concentration camp in Sarajevo (B&H)
- Sofia ~ Corruption and shady practices hinder the management of stray animals population
- India ~ cow slaughter and the illegal cattle mafia
- Italy ~ the Mafia involved in shelter activities
- Romania ~ organized crime & stray dog business>
- the mayor of Botosani wants to send the city's stray dogs to Constanta, on a dubious 'pilot project'
- Oradea-dog-shelter, once Romania's privately funded pilot project par excellence, has become a living hell for the animals since the municipality has taken it over
- Timisoara - the municipality pays huge sums of taxpayer's money to Danyflor to care for the stray dogs, but they receive not even a drop of water in their shelter. So where does the money go?
- cock fighting *
- dog fighting>
- horse fighting *
- horse races in Italy
- Italian Mafia making millions from brutal horse races
- ivory trade>
- rhinoceros (Rhino) horn
- China reopens trade in tiger and leopard skins (2011)
- wildlife trafficking
- wombat Forest and its waters under threat of gold mining contamination
- labour
- research
- animal experimentation ~ hidden crimes>
- animal experimentation & vivisection>
- inside laboratories >
- AstraZeneca: please set the Beagles free!
- Donetsk Medical University, Ukraine ~ appalling living conditions and barbaric experiments conducted on dogs and other animals
- Europe's biggest vivarium in Azambuja, Portugal
- Green Hill, Montichiari, Italy
- Mansoura University ~ merciless killing of donkeys as a mean of education
- Animal testing and monkey business at Monash University, Australia
- Monkeys killed for being of the 'wrong size'
- University of Texas
- University of Wisconsin–Madison conducts horrific experiments on cats
- Wayne State University’s Inhumane Dog Experiments: Queenie’s Story
- animal cloning for food production in the EU
- animal experimentation - good science versus bad science
- 1,000 doctors (and many more) against vivisection
- animal experiments - safer medicines>
- Beagles are the dog breed most often used in animal testing, due to their size and passive nature
- Cosmetics: the final ban will come into force in March 2013 and no cosmetic products or ingredients will be allowed to be sold in the EU if tested on animals
- India, Government bans use of live animals for education and research
- Iran plans to send monkey into space
- Italy ~ 86% of Italians want to abolish vivisection >
- List of animal derived ingredients and additives
- Make vivisection history!
- NIH Decision signals the beginning of the end for medical research on chimps
- REACH ~ we have until 2018 to save up to 54 million animals from being poisoned and killed
- UK - Government opens laboratory gates to lost pets, protects secrecy, poisoning and electrocution
- Western beauty giants selling their brands to China's fast-growing middle classes are threatening to reverse years of progress in reducing animal testing
- sport
- society
- animal abuse>
- animal abusers - named & shamed!>
- Staff of the Faculty Of Veterinary Medicine Cairo University (FOVMCU) threw dogs off the third floor after experimenting on them
- Alabama, "Purple Hearted Puppies" charged in an extreme case of animal neglect and abuse
- Brazil, Camilla Corrêa Alves de Moura Araújo - a practicing nurse killed a little Yorkshire in front of her child
- Bulgaria ~ Lynch mob enters private property and beats defenseless crippled doggy while TV-reporters film the scene and the police does nothing
- Derek Fierro, a CPS teacher charged with beating his dog to death
- Greece, priest shot dog for trespassing the convent yard in Patra
- Greece, a so-called shepherd systematically neglected his dog, brutally beat it and gouged out its eyes
- Greece, Salamina ~ a man shot in cold blood a stray for trespassing his garden
- Greece, a man of Albanian nationality tried to kill three dogs with a sledgehammer
- Animals being mistreated at the University of Guadalajara, Mexico
- UK, Robert Payne, ex-councillor for Keighley West, killed four kittens in barbaric attack
- three Vietnamese soldiers tortured and skinning alive before eviscerating and barbecuing two rare monkeys
- cruelty to animals and connections (incl. petition to the EU)
- animal abuse - how to report
- never be silent!
- animal abusers - named & shamed!>
- animal crush videos
- baby bear torn away from her mother to be used as tourist attraction in Ukraine
- Egypt ~ when migrating birds collide with wind turbines
- British Government euthanizes 800 war dogs!
- Camel cull in Australia
- capitivity>
- Chernobyl - life in the dead zone
- China ~ live animal key-rings for sale on street markets
- companion animals ~ pets>
- black cat superstitions & black dog syndrome
- companion animal overpopulation
- So you’re thinking about giving up your pet? You might want to reconsider!
- gas chambers>
- portraits taken on the very day in which the animal depicted is about to be put down or mercifully killed
- Puppy mills (puppy farms) - prisoners for profit
- the economic benefits of no kill animal control
- a NO KILL NATION for just one day!
- We want justice for Buddy
- dogs ~ man's best friends>
- the sad of case of Lennox, the dog>
- July 11 ~ International Lennox Day
- Lennox ''humanely put to sleep' , Belfast City Council confirmed on July 11, 2012
- World declares war on Belfast!
- One last push of urgent e-mails needed for a Lennox miracle
- First Minister Peter Robinson has made a last-minute intervention to try and save the life of Lennox
- China, a new policy proclaimed in Harbin Province prohibits large dogs
- Denmark - 13 dog breeds are now banned. 400,000 dogs are in eminent danger of being euthanized
- The Riot Dog
- lost dogs
- the sad of case of Lennox, the dog>
- stray dogs - the anonymous>
- Bosnia & Herzegovina: if the law from 2009 gets suspended, the killing of stray animals would resume!>
- Bulgaria, the stray dogs of Sofia are in eminent danger!>
- Egypt has organized intensive campaigns against stray animals. The animals are being poisoned with strychnine and/or shot dead with rifles
- EU, when do you think it is time to act?
- Humane dog population management guidance
- India ~ Send stray dogs to China, Mizoram or Nagaland, for “whatever they do to them”
- Italy ~ the Mafia involved in shelter activities
- Romania ~ organized crime & stray dog business>
- the mayor of Botosani wants to send the city's stray dogs to Constanta, on a dubious 'pilot project'
- Oradea-dog-shelter, once Romania's privately funded pilot project par excellence, has become a living hell for the animals since the municipality has taken it over
- Timisoara - the municipality pays huge sums of taxpayer's money to Danyflor to care for the stray dogs, but they receive not even a drop of water in their shelter. So where does the money go?
- Russia's homeless animals
- Turkey intends to kill all stray animals!
- For a rabies-free future
- Trap-Neuter-Release
- Stray cats are starving to death in Belarus basements that authorities have sealed to control rats
- deforestation and the construction of the Belo Monte dam is killing the Amazon
- Over 1,000 dolphins killed by villagers of a remote Solomon island in conservation dispute
- electrocution of wild animals *
- electronic waste ~ the truth
- European tourist countries ~ the ugly truth
- event preparations>
- extinction >
- famous animals *
- fireworks and animals
- Fukushima ~ animals left behind>
- Kerala - tourist information
- Killer whales trapped by ice near Inukjuak, in northern Quebec
- loss of habitat *
- military training exercises
- over-population control *
- politics>
- pollution>
- Puppy farms (campaign)>
- religion>
- U.S. Congressmen compare undercover investigators to arsonists and terrorists
- zoophilia - bestiality>
- animal abuse>
- tradition
- animal sacrifice >
- Aid al-kabir or Eid al-Adha
- Dashain festival, Nepal
- Gadhimai festival in Nepal
- Animal sacrifice at Halavatha Munneswaram Kovil, Sri Lanka
- Animal sacrifice in India
- India ~ Owl sacrifice during Diwali, the Festival of Lights
- traditional funeral ceremony and sacrifice, island of Sumba, Indonesia
- Kapparot
- the goats of Khokana
- The brutal festival at Nem Thuong village, Vietnam
- Ukweshwana, the festival of fresh fruits
- bullfighting - corridas>
- Spanish fiestas>
- Dog spinning or “trichane” is a ritual celebrated in Brodilovo, a village in Bulgaria
- Horse races in Italy
- Salburun, which means "Hunter's Zest" in Kyrgyz language, has been held annually since 1997
- Thanksgiving, Christmas & Easter>
- Traditional Chinese Medicine TCM>
- animal sacrifice >
Leather
Every year, the global leather industry slaughters more than a billion animals and tans their skins and hides.
Many of these animals suffer all the horrors of factory farming - including extreme crowding and confinement, deprivation, and un-anesthetized castration, branding, tail-docking, and dehorning - as well as cruel treatment during transport and slaughter.
The multibillion-dollar meat industry profits from more than just animals’ flesh. The by-products of meat consumption include fats and blood that are used in livestock feed, tires, explosives, paints, and cosmetics; organs that are used in pet food; and heart valves that are used in the pharmaceutical industry. The skin of the animal is considered to be one of the most significant economic by-products of the meatpacking industry.
When dairy cows’ production declines, their skin is made into leather. The hides of their calves, who are frequently raised for veal, are made into high-priced calfskin. The economic success of slaughterhouses and dairy farms is directly linked to the sale of leather goods.
Other animals slaughtered for skins
Most leather produced and sold in the United States and Europe is made from the skins of cattle and calves, but leather is also made from horses, sheep, lambs, goats, and pigs who are slaughtered for meat. Other species are hunted and killed specifically for their skins, including zebras, bison, water buffaloes, boars, kangaroos, elephants, eels, sharks, dolphins, seals, walruses, frogs, turtles, crocodiles, lizards, and snakes.
Other “exotic” animals, such as alligators, are factory-farmed for their skins and meat. Humane treatment is not a priority of those who poach and hunt animals to obtain their skin or those who transform skin into leather. Alligators on farms may be beaten to death with hammers and axes, sometimes remaining conscious and in agony for up to two hours after being skinned.
Kangaroos are slaughtered by the millions every year, their skins considered to be prime material for soccer shoes. Although the Australian government requires hunters to shoot the animals, orphaned joeys and wounded adults are, according to government code, to be decapitated or hit sharply on the head “to destroy the brain.”
Snakes and lizards may be skinned alive because of the belief that live flaying imparts suppleness to the finished leather.
Kid goats may be boiled alive to make kid gloves, and the skins of unborn calves and lambs some purposely aborted, others from slaughtered pregnant cows and ewes - are considered especially “luxurious.”
Shearling, contrary to what many consumers think, is not sheared wool; the term refers to a yearling sheep who has been shorn once. A shearling garment is made from a sheep or lamb shorn shortly before slaughter; the skin is tanned with the wool still on it.
Animals used to produce leather in other countries often suffer horribly as well. A investigation into cattle slaughter in India, where many mistakenly believe that cows are revered, revealed that old cows are sold at auction and then marched long distances to illegal transport trucks. Often sick and injured from the grueling march, as many as 50 cattle are crammed into trucks designed to hold no more than a dozen animals. They are then driven over rutted roads, all the while goring and trampling each other, to ancient slaughterhouses where all four feet are bound together and their throats are slit.
Hundreds of thousands of dog and cat skins are traded in Europe each year (with an estimated 2 million killed in China to meet the demand), but many are bought unknowingly by consumers since the products made from dog and cat fur are often mislabeled and do not accurately indicate their origin.
In France, more than 20,000 cats are stolen for the skin trade annually; during a police raid on a tannery in Deux-Sèvres, 1,500 skins, used to make baby shoes, were seized. When you buy leather products, you may unknowingly be purchasing leather from dog and cat tanneries.
Tannery Toxins
Although leathermakers like to tout their products as “biodegradable” and “eco-friendly,” the process of tanning stabilizes the collagen or protein fibers so that they actually stop biodegrading.
Until the late 1800s, animal skin was air- or salt-dried and tanned with vegetable tannins or oil, but today animal skin is turned into finished leather with a variety of much more dangerous substances, including mineral salts, formaldehyde, coal-tar derivatives, and various oils, dyes, and finishes, some of them cyanide-based.
Most leather produced in the U.S. is chrome-tanned. All wastes containing chromium are considered hazardous by the Environmental Protection Agency. In addition to the toxic substances mentioned above, tannery effluent also contains large amounts of other pollutants, such as protein, hair, salt, lime sludge, sulfides, and acids.
Among the disastrous consequences of this noxious waste is the threat to human health from the highly elevated levels of lead, cyanide, and formaldehyde in the groundwater near tanneries. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the incidence of leukemia among residents in an area surrounding one tannery in Kentucky was five times the national average. Arsenic, a common tannery chemical, has long been associated with lung cancer in workers who are exposed to it on a regular basis. Several studies have established links between sinus and lung cancers and the chromium used in tanning. Studies of leather-tannery workers in Sweden and Italy found cancer risks “between 20% and 50% above those expected.”
Raising animals whose skins eventually become leather creates waste and pollution. Huge amounts of fossil fuels are consumed in livestock production. (By contrast, plastic wearables account for only a fraction of the petroleum used in the U.S. ) Trees are cleared to create pastureland, vast quantities of water are used, and feedlot and dairy-farm runoff are a major source of water pollution. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, tanneries have largely shifted operations worldwide from developed to undeveloped nations, where labor is cheap and environmental regulations are lax.
Alternatives
There are many alternatives to leather, including cotton, linen, rubber, ramie, canvas, and synthetics. Chlorenol (called “Hydrolite” by Avia and “Durabuck” by Nike), used in athletic and hiking shoes, is an exciting new material that’s perforated for breatheability, stretches around the foot with the same “give” as leather, gives good support, and is machine-washable.
Vegan shoes and accessories are inexpensive, and some are even made from recycled materials.
Reference
Many of these animals suffer all the horrors of factory farming - including extreme crowding and confinement, deprivation, and un-anesthetized castration, branding, tail-docking, and dehorning - as well as cruel treatment during transport and slaughter.
The multibillion-dollar meat industry profits from more than just animals’ flesh. The by-products of meat consumption include fats and blood that are used in livestock feed, tires, explosives, paints, and cosmetics; organs that are used in pet food; and heart valves that are used in the pharmaceutical industry. The skin of the animal is considered to be one of the most significant economic by-products of the meatpacking industry.
When dairy cows’ production declines, their skin is made into leather. The hides of their calves, who are frequently raised for veal, are made into high-priced calfskin. The economic success of slaughterhouses and dairy farms is directly linked to the sale of leather goods.
Other animals slaughtered for skins
Most leather produced and sold in the United States and Europe is made from the skins of cattle and calves, but leather is also made from horses, sheep, lambs, goats, and pigs who are slaughtered for meat. Other species are hunted and killed specifically for their skins, including zebras, bison, water buffaloes, boars, kangaroos, elephants, eels, sharks, dolphins, seals, walruses, frogs, turtles, crocodiles, lizards, and snakes.
Other “exotic” animals, such as alligators, are factory-farmed for their skins and meat. Humane treatment is not a priority of those who poach and hunt animals to obtain their skin or those who transform skin into leather. Alligators on farms may be beaten to death with hammers and axes, sometimes remaining conscious and in agony for up to two hours after being skinned.
Kangaroos are slaughtered by the millions every year, their skins considered to be prime material for soccer shoes. Although the Australian government requires hunters to shoot the animals, orphaned joeys and wounded adults are, according to government code, to be decapitated or hit sharply on the head “to destroy the brain.”
Snakes and lizards may be skinned alive because of the belief that live flaying imparts suppleness to the finished leather.
Kid goats may be boiled alive to make kid gloves, and the skins of unborn calves and lambs some purposely aborted, others from slaughtered pregnant cows and ewes - are considered especially “luxurious.”
Shearling, contrary to what many consumers think, is not sheared wool; the term refers to a yearling sheep who has been shorn once. A shearling garment is made from a sheep or lamb shorn shortly before slaughter; the skin is tanned with the wool still on it.
Animals used to produce leather in other countries often suffer horribly as well. A investigation into cattle slaughter in India, where many mistakenly believe that cows are revered, revealed that old cows are sold at auction and then marched long distances to illegal transport trucks. Often sick and injured from the grueling march, as many as 50 cattle are crammed into trucks designed to hold no more than a dozen animals. They are then driven over rutted roads, all the while goring and trampling each other, to ancient slaughterhouses where all four feet are bound together and their throats are slit.
Hundreds of thousands of dog and cat skins are traded in Europe each year (with an estimated 2 million killed in China to meet the demand), but many are bought unknowingly by consumers since the products made from dog and cat fur are often mislabeled and do not accurately indicate their origin.
In France, more than 20,000 cats are stolen for the skin trade annually; during a police raid on a tannery in Deux-Sèvres, 1,500 skins, used to make baby shoes, were seized. When you buy leather products, you may unknowingly be purchasing leather from dog and cat tanneries.
Tannery Toxins
Although leathermakers like to tout their products as “biodegradable” and “eco-friendly,” the process of tanning stabilizes the collagen or protein fibers so that they actually stop biodegrading.
Until the late 1800s, animal skin was air- or salt-dried and tanned with vegetable tannins or oil, but today animal skin is turned into finished leather with a variety of much more dangerous substances, including mineral salts, formaldehyde, coal-tar derivatives, and various oils, dyes, and finishes, some of them cyanide-based.
Most leather produced in the U.S. is chrome-tanned. All wastes containing chromium are considered hazardous by the Environmental Protection Agency. In addition to the toxic substances mentioned above, tannery effluent also contains large amounts of other pollutants, such as protein, hair, salt, lime sludge, sulfides, and acids.
Among the disastrous consequences of this noxious waste is the threat to human health from the highly elevated levels of lead, cyanide, and formaldehyde in the groundwater near tanneries. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the incidence of leukemia among residents in an area surrounding one tannery in Kentucky was five times the national average. Arsenic, a common tannery chemical, has long been associated with lung cancer in workers who are exposed to it on a regular basis. Several studies have established links between sinus and lung cancers and the chromium used in tanning. Studies of leather-tannery workers in Sweden and Italy found cancer risks “between 20% and 50% above those expected.”
Raising animals whose skins eventually become leather creates waste and pollution. Huge amounts of fossil fuels are consumed in livestock production. (By contrast, plastic wearables account for only a fraction of the petroleum used in the U.S. ) Trees are cleared to create pastureland, vast quantities of water are used, and feedlot and dairy-farm runoff are a major source of water pollution. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, tanneries have largely shifted operations worldwide from developed to undeveloped nations, where labor is cheap and environmental regulations are lax.
Alternatives
There are many alternatives to leather, including cotton, linen, rubber, ramie, canvas, and synthetics. Chlorenol (called “Hydrolite” by Avia and “Durabuck” by Nike), used in athletic and hiking shoes, is an exciting new material that’s perforated for breatheability, stretches around the foot with the same “give” as leather, gives good support, and is machine-washable.
Vegan shoes and accessories are inexpensive, and some are even made from recycled materials.
Reference
