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Protect Our Water From Livestock Feces
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Remind the EPA that our farms and water sources are meant to give life, not slowly take it away.
More than 2,100 large-scale hog operations in North Carolina house roughly 10 million hogs, making the coastal state one of the world’s top pork producers.
A majority of the state’s concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) are located in Duplin and Sampson counties where hogs are said to outnumber people 40 to one1.
The state of North Carolina is one of the biggest producers of hog feces. North Carolina wet animal waste (primarily consisting of hog feces) tallies in at over 10 billion gallons2.
How does one go about managing 10 billion gallons of feces?
One of the primary ways in which hog feces has been managed in North Carolina is through anaerobic lagoons. These lagoons are created from a “manure slurry,” which is washed out from underneath the animal pens and then piped into the lagoon3.”
These lagoons are often constructed near primary sources of water, and operate without enclosure, meaning that gases like ammonia, hydrogen sulfide and methane are emitted into the surrounding air space4.
More than that, when coastal disasters strike North Carolina, and those primary sources of water flood, these lagoons are breached5. Gallons of feces then enter these water sources, introducing harmful substances to unsuspecting animals and people, including: antibiotics, estrogens, bacteria, pesticides, heavy metals, and protozoa.
This is detrimental to the environment and to the food webs relying upon these water sources.
Following the devastation of Hurricane Floyd, the state of North Carolina banned the construction of new anaerobic lagoons in 1999. However, this didn’t include the anaerobic lagoons that were already operative6. Decades later, anaerobic lagoons remain the main method of waste management for large-scale North Carolinian hog farms7.
This is unacceptable. For our health, for the health of animals, and for the health of the environment, farmers everywhere must manage their livestock waste carefully, and with more in mind than cost.
Tell the Environmental Protection Agency that you deserve better, that our farms are supposed to give us life, not take it from us. Sign the petition below and urge the EPA to ban anaerobic lagoons entirely.