Is it safe to live near a feedlot?

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asked Dec 3, 2021 in Other-Environment by AlenMoorer (1,040 points)
Is it safe to live near a feedlot?

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answered Dec 7, 2021 by Kaptainkanda (10,200 points)
Living near a feedlot is safe but it can get smelly and undesirable.

However if you have breathing issues including Asthma then it may be unsafe to live near a feedlot as feedlots create a lot of dust and other pollutants that could make it harder to breathe.

Feedlots generate dust, odor and mountains of manure.

And when it rains, feedlots produce runoff that could pollute local water supplies.

These feedlot facts make feedlots prime targets for both federal regulators and neighbors who may not like agriculture much to begin with.

Feedlots are bad for the environment as feedlots pollute the air, soil and can also pollute the water.

Feedlots concentrate animal waste and other hazardous substances that can pollute the air and the water with their runoff.

Finishing cattle in this way also consumes huge amounts of grain and water.

The reason feedlots are bad is because they pollute the air, soil, ground, and make it hard to breathe around the feedlots and also because the animals in feedlots are in their own filth and packed in tightly.

Feedlots are bad because they pollute the air as well as the ground with the smell and also the poop and pee from the cows and animals located in the feedlot.

Also the cows and animals in feedlots are packed in really tight and they usually stand in their own feces and urine until they are slaughtered.

An environmental downside of feedlots is that the way they concentrate and store manure often leads to high levels of local air and water pollution.

In addition, runoff of nitrogen-rich manure into waterways can contribute to "dead zones" in coastal areas.

Disadvantage of feedlots is that cattle stand in small, crowded areas in their own feces and urine all the time.

Another big concern and/or disadvantage of CAFO's is E. coli contamination.

Cattle that are fed a high corn based diet can have increased amounts of E. coli in their digestive tract.

Feedlot diets are different to the pasture that cattle would normally eat and the transition to a feedlot diet (a grain-based feed) can result in digestive disorders, including acidosis, and other health problems.

While feedlots may provide more space for cows to roam, they can also cause other, potentially negative animal welfare outcomes.

The main factors contributing to heat stress are a lack of shade, excessive weight brought on by being fed increasingly heavy diets, and cows with black hides.

Impacts of Poor Feedlot Management: Beef feedlots contribute to climate disruption via emissions of heat-trapping enteric methane (from cattle belching), manure methane (from storage lagoons), and nitrous oxide (from stored and applied manure and, indirectly, from over-applying fertilizer to the feed crops they rely on.

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