Is honey production unethical?
By Jeanie
In their Save our Bees Campaign, People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals (PETA) state that, as a result of disease, pesticides and
climate change, the honeybee population has been nearly decimated (some truth
in that) “but since the demand for the bees’ honey and other produces remains high,
these tiny animals are raised by industries, much like chickens, pigs and cows
are”. This, I think, is nonsense. As a rule beekeepers are deeply concerned with
the welfare of their charges and go to great lengths to keep their colonies
healthy. They do not kill off the hives
after stealing all the honey! Why on
earth would they? If they did the bees would die and dead bees are not the
beekeepers’ objective. Bees adapt to the
loss of honey and good beekeepers make sure to leave adequate honey in the hive
for the survival of the colony.
In a disingenuous piece aimed at children with the title “Bees
used for honey aren’t treated very nicely” PETA compares bees to factory farmed
animals and say they are forced to live in cramped conditions. They don’t mention that a manmade beehive is
no more or less cramped than one found in the wild. In fact, in experiments where boxes were
placed close to trees, the bees chose the boxes.
PETA argues that keeping bees in captivity is harmful to the
environment as they are needed to be free to act as pollinators. Again, this is disingenuous. While hives may be introduced to pollinate
farmland or orchards, bees are totally free to range over kilometres of
wildflowers and fly wherever they wish.
Bees return each night to their safe, warm, dry hives. If they didn’t want to return, they wouldn’t. They are not held captive and they can leave
whenever they want.
I understand why vegans don’t eat honey – it is a by-product
of bees and therefore unsuitable for people who exclude all produces that are
animal or animal-derived. But why do
they not just leave it there? Some vegan websites complain that beekeepers feed
sugar and syrup to bees. This is true. There are seasons when bees are unable to find
food on their own, for example when flowers are not in bloom. Without flowers bees die. Without a beekeeper feeding them, bees
die. For example in Western Canada,
where it is cold for 7 months of the year, hives often run short of food in
April. So beekeepers feed them. Without beekeepers there would be no honeybees
and no local honey in western Canada.
Vegans suggest alternatives to the evil honey market including coconut sugar and molasses. These products need to be processed in a factory and shipped halfway around the world to reach us while locally produced honey is readily available nearly everywhere. Not to mention the deforestation and loss of habitat to numerous other creatures that is the result of large-scale agriculture, including the production of coconut sugar. It is not an environmentally acceptable alternative.
There are concerns.
As a result of mono-cropping, especially in the USA, there can be
700,000+ acres of a single crop. Bees
are shipped in for a few weeks and then sent off to wherever they are needed
for the next mono-crop. This can cause
stress to local bee populations and a system of diversified, smaller-scale agriculture
that could support a year-round population of bees would be better – but that
is an argument about bees in agriculture, not honey.
I am sure that it is true that some beekeepers are less
careful with their bees than they should be but, as a general rule, beekeepers
like bees and they want the best for them. It makes good business sense. Honeybees are thriving because beekeepers are
keeping them alive and healthy and producing honey. Added bonus – they don’t eat them.
When I started researching this blog I thought it was
interesting but it has actually made me quite cross. I intend to react by eating as much honey as I
can.
Quite! I think that you should keep a hive at the bottom of the garden. I will help you by eating your honey!
ReplyDeleteQuite! I think that you should keep a hive at the bottom of the garden. I will help you by eating your honey!
ReplyDelete