The change is from small farms to large industrial operations

Song The change is from small farms to large industrial operations
Artist 英语听力
Album VOA慢速英语:农业报道

Lyrics

[00:00.10] From VOA Learning English,
[00:03.09] this is the Agriculture Report.
[00:06.09] Demand for meat, milk and eggs
[00:09.02] is growing around the world.
[00:11.31] To meet that demand,
[00:12.71] the way these products are produced is changing.
[00:16.63] The change is from small farms
[00:19.07] to large industrial operations.
[00:21.66] This has already happened in the United States.
[00:25.54] But not everyone is happy with the change.
[00:28.73] As a result, there is also a growing demand
[00:32.57] for products growing locally on small farms.
[00:36.60] In Clinton, North Carolina, some old buildings
[00:40.56] are all that remain from the days
[00:42.85] when James Lame raised hogs next to his home.
[00:47.79] He saw that small farmers were having trouble
[00:51.27] competing with companies that own large farms.
[00:55.06] "They had better consistency,
[00:56.80] better pork quality, better genetics.
[00:59.49] So after college, in '98,
[01:02.64] I decided to try and modernize."
[01:04.48] He stopped raising hogs in small building
[01:07.67] and built two industrial-scale hog barns,
[01:11.92] each of them holds 1,500 hogs.
[01:16.44] Nearly all pigs are raised this way
[01:19.63] in the United States now.
[01:21.92] The government says
[01:23.62] the efficiency of large-scale production
[01:26.65] in a controlled environment
[01:28.84] has helped reduce the price of a pork chop
[01:32.29] by nearly 20 percent since 1998.
[01:36.92] These efficient and intensive production methods
[01:41.11] are being used around the world,
[01:43.74] many experts say that is a good thing
[01:47.13] as the demand for meat grows.
[01:49.63] But livestock expert Carolyn Opio points out
[01:54.16] that the land, water
[01:55.76] and feed required to produce it are limited.
[01:59.29] "If we are to produce within the constraints
[02:02.87] that we are facing today, efficiency, I think, is key."
[02:06.77] Mrs Opio is with the United Nations Food
[02:09.73] and Agriculture Organization,
[02:12.17] but the results of the efficiency
[02:14.31] are not always necessarily good.
[02:17.04] The waste from thousands of confined animals
[02:21.53] can pollute waterways, and produce greenhouse gases.
[02:27.22] And some health experts are concerned about the antibiotics
[02:32.26] and other chemicals being put in the animal's feed.
[02:36.35] Others criticize the conditions in which the animals are kept.
[02:41.48] So today a growing number of people
[02:45.01] are like Kevin Summers in Amissville, Virginia,
[02:48.84] are returning to small-scale farming.
[02:52.68] "In order to feed the world, I think this is a better way,
[02:56.03] It's a cleaner way. It's a more humane way."
[02:59.21] More Americans today say they want to know
[03:03.85] where their food comes from,
[03:05.84] some might like the way Kevin Summers raises his hogs.
[03:10.72] "I can see the entire process unfold
[03:12.91] before my eyes and know that they had a good life
[03:15.81] and were healthy and happy."
[03:17.75] The hogs eat damaged apples and old pumpkins,
[03:22.19] this reduces food waste,
[03:25.48] but this kind of farming also means higher prices.
[03:30.01] Even so, Kevin Summers as he believes
[03:34.92] it would still be possible to meet global demand this way.
[03:38.72] "It would just involve people making the choice
[03:40.86] to buy this kind of food and say that,
[03:43.75] 'I care about something other than just the cost.'"
[03:46.69] And that's the Agriculture Report from VOA Learning English,
[03:52.77] I'm Karen Leggett.