Press release – Campaigners call on King’s Lynn and West Norfolk Council to reject plans for US-style industrial megafarm, say Council breaking the law by not considering climate impacts
Campaigners call on King’s Lynn and West Norfolk Council to reject plans for US-style industrial megafarm due to colossal climate impact
Campaigners call on King’s Lynn and West Norfolk Council to reject plans for US-style industrial megafarm, say Council breaking the law by not considering climate impacts
Campaigners have today issued an urgent call to the Borough Council of King’s Lynn and West Norfolk to reject plans to build a US-style ‘megafarm’ in Liz Truss’s former constituency in rural Norfolk on the grounds that it would jeopardise local and national climate change commitments.
Campaigning group Feedback and Sustain, the UK’s alliance for better food and farming, have also warned the Council that it is breaking the law by inexplicably leaving greenhouse gas emissions out of scope in the planning application produced by the developer of the site, industrial meat producer Cranswick Plc.
Greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed facility – which could produce up to 6 million chickens and 56,000 pigs a year in Methwold, Norfolk – are expected to be substantial. Legal challenges may be forthcoming if this application were to be approved, in light of significant deficiencies in the application.
In the wake of a Supreme Court’s judgment earlier this year – the Finch ruling – Feedback and Sustain’s legal advisers have indicated that the direct and indirect climate impacts of industrial livestock units must be considered by Councils when deciding on factory farm planning applications. Methwold is widely seen as a test case for similar planning applications by industrial livestock producers in other parts of the UK.
Cranswick Plc is one of the UK’s largest producers of pigs and chickens and has been the subject of complaints and enforcement action regarding extreme ammonia emissions and river pollution. It reported revenues of £2.3 billion for the year ending in March 2024 and supplies both the UK and export markets, including China.
There is significant local resistance to the extension of the Methwold factory farm: to date, the Council has received an unprecedented 10,000 letters objecting to the proposal.
If King’s Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council decides to grant planning permission, it would be in contravention of its climate strategy: the Council declared a climate emergency in 2021, and its climate strategy contains targets to reduce the Council’s own emissions as well as the wider emissions from local industry, transport, and domestic homes ‘as and when opportunities arise’.
The UK Government’s net zero commitment is enshrined in law, and national planning policy for England includes an objective to move to a low-carbon economy. The Methwold application would threaten the delivery of both policies. To meet national climate change targets, the Committee on Climate Change recommends a 20-50% reduction in meat consumption by 2050.
Natasha Hurley, Director of Campaigns at Feedback said, “Expanding emissions-intensive factory farming as the climate crisis intensifies is madness. This megafarm must be stopped, and we believe the law is on our side. We urge West Norfolk Borough Council in the strongest possible terms to reject this planning application.”
Ruth Westcott, Campaign Manager at Sustain said, “Industrial megafarms like this are completely unnecessary. As well as the unacceptable impact on the climate, family farmers say these kind of supply chains impose prices, trading terms, and insecurity that they can’t survive. Sustainable farming is the real path to creating good jobs, local food security and decent returns for farmers.”
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council is currently conducting a 30-day public consultation following the publication of an environmental statement by Cranswick on 31st October. This will be followed by a review, with the Council expected to issue a decision on the planning application in early 2025.
The government is currently undertaking a review of the National Planning Policy Framework. Sustain and Feedback have both called for climate change to be made a material planning consideration for industrial livestock units in submissions to the government. They are also calling for a national presumption against new and expanded intensive livestock units in polluted catchments.
Notes to editors:
- Kings Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council’s latest Local Carbon Audit report and district emissions report shows that total gross emissions from council activities are 3,574 tonnes and transport emissions are 389,000 tonnes. The proposed development was estimated by Sustain to be capable of producing up to 120,000 tonnes CO2 equivalent per year.
- Under the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2017, environmental impact assessments must include greenhouse gas emissions and the project’s vulnerability to climate change. Despite this, planning applications for industrial livestock units do not currently include a detailed GHG assessment as the norm.
- Factory farming is on the rise across the UK. Norfolk is one of several British counties targeted by developers of US-style megafarms. According to Compassion in World Farming, the number of the largest intensive livestock units in the UK has increased by 20% since 2016.
- Cranswick supplies most of the UK’s grocery retailers and has a strong presence in the wholesale and food service sectors as well as a “substantial export business.”
Contacts:
- Natasha Hurley, Director of Campaigns – Feedback natasha@feedbackglobal.org
- Ruth Westcott, Campaign Manager – Sustain ruth@sustainweb.org
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