World Animal Protection Launches a Just Transition Campaign Ahead of COP 30

Elephants drinking water

Nairobi, Kenya. World Animal Protection has officially launched a campaign advocating for a just transition away from industrial animal agriculture during a high-profile webinar event held earlier today.

As part of the Road to Belém, the organisation announced its active participation in the upcoming 30th Conference of the Parties (COP 30), where it will be calling for urgent action to reform global food systems in alignment with climate, biodiversity, and human rights goals.

The new campaign presents a compelling case for phasing out industrial factory farming and transitioning to equitable, humane, and sustainable food systems. This move is essential to meeting international climate commitments, including the Paris Agreement, and safeguarding public health and planetary boundaries.

Sally Kahiu, the External Affairs Lead at World Animal Protection, Said, “Our global food system, especially industrial animal agriculture, not only accelerates biodiversity loss, depletes water resources, and contributes to rural poverty and public health crises but also compromises animal welfare on a massive scale.

As we start our journey of mobilising like-minded stakeholders, our rallying call is just one, we’re calling on world leaders in this year’s COP 30 to recognise the urgent need for a global food system that places people, animals, and the planet over profit. It’s about rebuilding food systems that are just, resilient, and climate safe.”

Based on their previous research, World Animal Protection highlights that food system emissions alone could derail efforts to stay below the critical 1.5°C warming target—even if fossil fuel use is eliminated.

It calls for a 50% reduction in global emissions from animal production by 2030, alongside a strong shift toward plant-rich diets and agroecological practices, especially in high-consuming and high-producing countries.

The expansion of industrial animal agriculture has led to poor living conditions for billions of animals, increased risk of zoonotic disease outbreaks and the overuse of antibiotics, contributing to antimicrobial resistance. Additionally, the destruction of natural habitats for agricultural expansion for animal feed and production threatens wild animal populations, driving species to the brink of extinction and further destabilising ecosystems.

World Animal Protection’s campaign emphasises:

  • The phasing out of industrial animal farming in favour of small and medium-scale diversified farms.
  • Protection and empowerment of smallholder farmers and marginalised communities.
  • Accountability for corporations driving social and environmental harm.
  • The need for an inclusive governance and indigenous rights-based approach to food and climate policy.

World Animal Protection will continue to mobilise public support and collaborate with allies across civil society, Indigenous groups, youth, and sustainable farming networks in the lead-up to COP 30 in Belém, Brazil, to advocate for a just transition away from industrial factory farming to an equitable, humane and sustainable food system globally.

African Eye Report

 

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