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A thousand pigs just burned alive in a barn fire

On Tuesday in Shine, North Carolina, a barn holding over 1,000 pigs caught on fire. Multiple fire departments were called to put out the blaze, but only 200 pigs survived. The cause of the fire is under investigation and hasnā€™t yet been determined. This is noā€¦

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Last Tuesday in Shine, North Carolina, a barn holding over 1,000 pigs caught on fire. Multiple fire departments were called to put out the blaze, but only 200 pigs survived. The cause of the fire is under investigation and hasnā€™t yet been determined. This is not an isolated incident. Three weeks ago, 1,100 pigs died in a fire at a factory farm in Ohio, while 70,000 chickens died in a fire at a California factory farm in mid-July. So far, in 2024, nearly 1.5 million farmed animals have died in barn fires, according to data compiled by the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), a US nonprofit organization. More than 8 million farmed animals have perished in barn fires over the last decade, but animal advocates believe the true number is much higher because reporting requirements vary by state. Among the factory farming complexā€™s many cruelties, these deaths are little noted but disturbingly common. [Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/09/Ahn6b-over-8-million-farmed-animals-have-died-in-barn-fires-since-2013-the-true-death-count-is-likely-far-higher-nbsp-.png?quality=90&strip=all] This weekā€™s fire at the pig farm in North Carolina is especially timely, however: The pork industry has recently pushed back against proposed fire codes that would require sprinkler systems at new farms. Farm fires and how to put them out Virtually all animals raised for meat, dairy, and eggs in the US are raised on factory farms, where thousands to tens of thousands of animals are crammed together in large warehouses. These arenā€™t the old red barns you might see from the highway, anachronisms from a pre-industrial age. These contain modern ventilation, lighting, and heating systems that can malfunction and start a fire. Malfunctioning heating and electrical systems are the main cause of barn fires, according to the research foundation of the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), a non-governmental organization that writes the fire codes and standards many states and localities adopt. Other causes include machinery, weather, wildfires, and, albeit rarely, arson. In early 2024, an NFPA expert committee overwhelmingly voted to update its animal housing code, which includes commercial livestock facilities, to require that buildings being built or renovated at mid- and large-sized factory farms install sprinkler systems starting in 2025. However, the code would still need to be adopted by localities and states to become enforceable. In response, the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) filed a motion to strike the requirement, which was rejected by NFPA members at its annual technical meeting. NPPC appealed that decision and was granted a hearing by the organizationā€™s standards council, which took place last month. The council recently rejected the industryā€™s appeal, and the requirement for applicable livestock barns to install sprinkler systems will be included in the upcoming 2025 edition of the NFPAā€™s animal housing code. The National Pork Producers Council didnā€™t respond to a request for comment, but it laid out its position in a September blog. One of its arguments is simply that more research is needed to determine the causes of barn fires and solutions to prevent them. Notably, however, the National Fire Protection Associationā€™s foundation published a comprehensive report in 2022 detailing the causes of barn fires and recommended sprinkler systems as the first solution. In its appeal, the pork group had laid out a number of other reasons to reject the sprinkler requirement, including biosecurity, environmental pollution, and the potential for sprinkler activation to harm animals. ā€œIn my opinion, a lot of this is grasping at straws,ā€ said Allie Granger, a policy adviser at AWI. ā€œA lot of their claims seem to really just distract from the fact that this is a pervasive issue within their industry.ā€ The pork groupā€™s biggest concern, however, appears to be how much sprinkler requirements would cost the industry. The meat industryā€™s same old argument on repeat The pork council claims that installing sprinkler systems would cost pork producers $9 to $15 per square foot. If theyā€™re right, that would come out to roughly $200,000 for an industrial barn, and many facilities have multiple barns. Itā€™s a lot of money, but a reasonable price to pay for protecting vulnerable animals trapped in a fire. Even though fires are relatively rare, buildings for humans require sprinkler systems because weā€™ve decided ā€” rightfully ā€” that we value human life enough to protect it, even if it makes construction that much more expensive. ā€œThey donā€™t want to put up the cost for sprinklers, and they just will continue to ignore the fact that thousands of animals are dying on their facilities,ā€ Granger said. The pork industry, despite its supposed ā€œmoral obligationā€ to raise animals ā€œhumanely and compassionately,ā€ is willing to absorb the loss of animal life in an occasional barn fire if it means not incurring the cost of installing and maintaining sprinkler systems. It has also aggressively lobbied to maintain its right to confine pregnant pigs in tiny crates for virtually their entire lives for the same reason: cost. [Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/09/WAM26923.jpg?quality=90&strip=all] Over the last couple of years, the poultry industry ā€” in its efforts to stamp out the spread of bird flu ā€” has killed tens of millions of animals by closing vents and cranking up the heat so the birds slowly die by heatstroke, the most cost-effective, and cruelest, form of mass euthanasia. If thereā€™s one defining characteristic of todayā€™s meat industry, itā€™s a willingness to sacrifice the welfare of an animal ā€” or the safety of a worker or the health of a river, for that matter ā€” if it improves its bottom line. At some point, regulators need to say enough is enough and enact commonsense reforms. Sprinkler systems to prevent animals dying en masse by fire seems like a good place to start. Update, September 16, 11:55 am ET: This story, originally published on September 16, has been updated with the NFPA councilā€™s decision to reject the pork industryā€™s appeal of new sprinkler requirements.
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Interest rate cuts for first time in four years in US

US Federal Reserve announced a 50 basis points cut in interest rates

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Washington: The US central bank has cut interest rates for the first time in four years to control inflation.

Inflation in the US, the world's largest economy, had pushed interest rates to their highest levels in two decades.

The US Federal Reserve has announced a 50 basis points cut in interest rates.

Fed policymakers also expect interest rates to be cut by another 50 basis points this year.

Wall Street also ended the day slightly lower after the interest rate cut announcement, with the S&P 500 down 0.29 percent.

Inflation, which peaked in the summer of 2022, has also slowed, Steve Sosnick, chief market strategist at Interactive Brokers, told the foreign news agency.

The decision by the Federal Reserve Bank to cut its benchmark federal funds rate from 4.75 percent to 5 percent marks a turning point in its fight against inflation.

“This decision to cut interest rates reflects our growing confidence,” Federal Reserve Bank chief Jerome Powell told reporters.

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Changing With Our Climate

In recent years, thereā€™sĀ beenĀ aĀ growingĀ appreciation forĀ IndigenousĀ land stewardship and traditional knowledge. But what gets overlooked is that successfully managing those lands means that Indigenous people have already survived severe climate events and extā€¦

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In recent years, thereā€™s been a growing appreciation for Indigenous land stewardship and traditional knowledge. But what gets overlooked is that successfully managing those lands means that Indigenous people have already survived severe climate events and extreme weather. Now, Indigenous communities are leading the way in climate adaptations ā€” from living alongside rapidly melting ice to confronting rising seas and creating community support networks. Indigenous knowledge does not mean going back to ā€œtraditionalā€ methods; it means evolving, a characteristic that has always been a part of Indigenous life. Thereā€™s no easy fix for the planet. But Indigenous people have simple solutions rooted in the depth of their knowledge. Recently we launched Changing With Our Climate, a limited-run series exploring Indigenous solutions to extreme weather rooted in history ā€” and the future. This summer and fall, weā€™ll be publishing five features that center an Indigenous community confronting extreme weather on the front lines. This series has not set out to mythologize Indigenous communities with bespoke, unapproachable, or mystic traditional practices and solutions ā€” but instead underscores humility as a throughline. Indigenous people realize we cannot bend the world to our human will. Weā€™re far better and more resilient when we tune in and lean into changes when possible. By showing the connections between storms, climate disasters, and issues of tribal sovereignty, Changing With Our Climate will explore what it really means when we say that climate change is an existential threat ā€” and how we can work together to find a way out. This coastal tribe has a radical vision for fighting sea-level rise in the Hamptons Next to some of the priciest real estate in the world, the Shinnecock Nation refuses to merely retreat from its vulnerable shoreline. [Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/09/vox_flood_alexandra_bowman_720.png?quality=90&strip=all] Weā€™re in a deadly cycle of mega fires. The way out is to burn more. How one Karuk fire crew leader is decolonizing our relationship to fire. [Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/08/Vox_Fires2.jpg?quality=90&strip=all] What 6 degrees of warming means for a community built on ice Alaska is warming far faster than most of the world. For Indigenous people on the front lines, adaptation can be surprisingly simple. [Image: https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/07/Vox_AlaskaHeat.jpg?quality=90&strip=all] Our most meaningful solutions to the climate crisis are hidden in plain sight Thereā€™s no easy fix for the planet. But Indigenous people have simple solutions rooted in the depth of their knowledge. [Image: Eco-Friendly Futures: A Pictorial Odyssey into Renewable Energy, Sustainability, and Environmental Conservation ā€“ Vision for a Greener World! https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/09/GettyImages-2020332753.jpg?quality=90&strip=all]
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