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How many animals get slaughtered every day?

Hundreds of millions of animals get killed for meat every day.

The scale of humanity’s meat consumption is enormous. 360 million tonnes of meat every year.

This number is so large that I find it impossible to comprehend. What helps me to make these numbers more relatable is to turn them from the weight of meat to the number of animals and from the yearly total to the daily number. This is what I have done in the graphic below. It shows how many animals are slaughtered on any average day.

About 900,000 cows are slaughtered every day. If every cow was 2 meters long, and they all walked right behind each other, this line of cows would stretch for 1800 kilometers.1 This represents the number of cows slaughtered every day.

For chickens, the daily count is extremely large – 202 million chickens every day. To comprehend the scale, it is better to bring it down to the average minute: 140,000 chickens are slaughtered every minute.

The number of fish killed every day is very uncertain. I discuss this in some detail at the end of this article. But while the uncertainties are large, it is clear that the number of fish killed is large: certainly, hundreds of millions of fish are killed every day.

If you believe that the slaughter of animals causes them to suffer and attribute even a small measure of ethical significance to their suffering, then the moral scale of this reality is immense.

How many animals get slaughtered for meat every day?2
We today are living in a world in which we kill 900,000 cows, 1.4 million goats, 1.7 million sheep, 3.8 million pigs, and more than 200 million chicken every day

From the perspective of animal suffering, it is the absolute numbers of animals that matter, but if you want to explore this data in per capita terms, you can do so in our Animal Welfare Explorer.

It’s not just about how many farm animals are killed but also the suffering they endured while they were raised. The majority of the world’s farm animals are raised in dismal conditions. Pigs are held in cramped, stressful conditions, living a life in chronic discomfort and distress. Cows get their calves taken away to produce milk for human consumption, a practice under which both the mother and the calf suffer. Many animals are castrated without anesthetic. Chickens are often debeaked to stop them from fighting with other chickens out of discomfort and pain; many cannot turn around their entire lives.

What would be the benefits of reducing our meat consumption?

Meat production has a number of large negative impacts on the environment, wildlife, and our health.

See also our page on the environmental impacts of food production.

Viewed from the other side, this means that the benefits of reducing meat consumption are large. What would some of these benefits be?

Less land use for agriculture and more biodiversity: The use of land for agriculture is the main driver of biodiversity loss.3 Today, almost half of the world’s ice- and desert-free land is used for agriculture, and most of this land is used by livestock. The total global land use for meat and dairy production sums up to 37 million square kilometers, an area as large as the entirety of the Americas — from Alaska in the North to Cape Horn in the South.

For the data, see our page on land use.

As my colleague Hannah Ritchie showed, if we didn’t eat meat, it would be possible to reduce agricultural land from 4 to 1 billion hectares. Changes towards less meat consumption would have large benefits for animals around the world as wilderness could regrow to provide habitats for wildlife.4

Benefits for the world’s climate: Reducing global meat consumption would also help to address climate change: it would reduce direct emissions from burping cows and nitrous oxide from manure, but also reduce emissions from deforestation and land use change.

Less antibiotic resistance: Reducing the world's meat consumption would decrease the use of antibiotics in livestock farming, a practice that contributes to the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This reduction could preserve the efficacy of existing antibiotics and the health of people around the world.

Lower risk of pandemics: Many infectious diseases originate in other animals. The high-density conditions in many meat production facilities create ideal environments for the mutation and spread of pathogens. Reducing global meat consumption would reduce the risk of zoonotic diseases and the risks of suffering another pandemic.

Less animal suffering: Coming back to the starting point of this short text, less meat consumption would mean less suffering for animals.

I think this future is possible. I can imagine a future in which our grandchildren look back at our time and find it hard to believe that we today are living in a world in which we kill hundreds of millions of fish, 900,000 cows, 1.4 million goats, 1.7 million sheep, 3.8 million pigs, 11.8 million ducks, and more than 200 million chicken every day.


Acknowledgments: I would like to thank Hannah Ritchie, Pablo Rosado, Fiona Spooner, Bastian Herre, and Edouard Mathieu for their helpful comments on this essay and visualization.


Explore more research and data on Our World in Data:

Appendix: What about fish?

The visualization in the article above gives estimates for the daily death count of several land animals.

The reason that the estimate for fish is presented in less certain terms than for other animals is that there is little good data on how many fish are killed every year. Most data refers to the tonnage of aquatic animals killed, and estimates of the number of fish killed are much more uncertain than for land animals.

The Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN only publishes data on tonnage, but not on animals killed

The tonnage (weight) of fish available for human consumption sums up to 157 million tonnes per year, according to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN. Total production (which includes non-food uses such as fishmeal and fish oil) is estimated at 177.8 million tonnes of fish.

These numbers include animals from wild catch and aquaculture and refer to estimates for 2020 (the main article above discusses data for 2021, but there is no data on fish production available for that year yet). This includes all aquatic animals except aquatic mammals, crocodiles, alligators, and caimans.

These estimates can be found in FAO (2022) — The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2022. Towards Blue Transformation. Rome, FAO. https://doi.org/10.4060/cc0461en

Available estimates for the number of fish killed

Unfortunately, the FAO only publishes data on fish in tonnage and not as a count of the number of individual animals.

Other organizations attempt to estimate the number of individual animals, at least the number of farmed fish. The published estimates for the number of farmed fish come with very large uncertainties but give some indication of the scale:

Only considering farmed fish and relying on the midpoint estimate published by the Sentience Institute, the number of killed fish on any average day would be 211 million. (77,000,000,000/365 = 210,958,904 million) This would mean that the number of killed farmed fish is similar to the number of killed chickens. However, if the estimate by Mood et al. is correct, then the daily death count is almost twice as high.

These estimates refer to the number of farmed fish only; they do not include wild aquatic animals that are caught and killed for human consumption.

We can, however, get some sense of the magnitude of the total number of fish killed from the available FAO data on the weight of fish from aquacultures and wild catches. This data is available in our chart here: Seafood production: wild fish catch vs. aquaculture. In 2020, the weight of fish from aquaculture was 122.6 million tonnes, and the weight of fish from wild catches was 91 million tonnes.

Overall, it seems clear that at least hundreds of millions of fish are killed every day, but as emphasized throughout this article, the uncertainty is very large. Understanding how many animals are killed by humans and closing these gaps in our statistical understanding of the world would be important.

Endnotes

  1. A body length of 2m is a conservative estimate. The typical Holstein Friesian has a body length between 2.35m and 2.5m.

    The distance between Madrid and Amsterdam is about 1800 kilometers.

    Yearly, this is more than 16 times the circumference of Earth (40,075 km): 365*1800km=657,000km and 657,000km/40,075 km=16.4

  2. The data that this chart is based on can be explored in this interactive chart on the yearly number of animals slaughtered for meat. The interactive chart also allows you to explore this data for countries around the world and over time.

    These numbers only represent the number of animals slaughtered for meat. This means, for example, that these numbers do not include the number of male chicks that are killed in the egg industry (see chick culling on Wikipedia).

    The chart is based on the data for 2021, which is the latest available data at the time of writing in July ‘23.

    The calculations for the numbers shown in the chart are as follows:

    Cattle: 331,950,000 cows per year

    → 331,950,000/365.25 = 908,830 per day

    Goats: 500,870,000 per year

    → 500,870,000/365.25 = 1,371,307 per day

    Sheep: 617,260,000 per year

    → 617,260,000/365.25 = 1,689,966 per day

    Pigs: 1,400,000,000 per year

    → 1,400,000,000/365.25 = 3,832,991 per day

    Ducks: 4,310,000,000 per year

    4,310,000,000/365.25=11,800,137 per day

    Chicken: 73,790,000,000 per year

    → 73,790,000,000/365.25 = 202,026,010 per day

    → 202,026,010/(24*60) = 140,296 per minute

    All data here comes from the UN’s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). While this is the best, most comprehensive data available, it is far from perfect, and the uncertainties around the estimates are considerable. A discussion (from 2019) of some of the issues of animal counts in the FAO data can be found in this article by Saulius Šimčikas at Rethink Priorities: Accuracy issues in FAO animal numbers.

  3. We’ve written extensively about this problem here on Our World in Data. Articles that discuss the evidence and the scale of this issue include:

  4. Not just land animals would benefit: Livestock farming is also a significant source of phosphorus and nitrogen runoffs from the use of animal manure as fertilizer. Less of these nutrient runoffs would mean fewer instances of harmful algal blooms in bodies of water, thereby improving water quality and preserving aquatic biodiversity.

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Max Roser (2023) - “How many animals get slaughtered every day?” Published online at OurWorldinData.org. Retrieved from: 'https://ourworldindata.org/how-many-animals-get-slaughtered-every-day' [Online Resource]

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@article{owid-how-many-animals-get-slaughtered-every-day,
    author = {Max Roser},
    title = {How many animals get slaughtered every day?},
    journal = {Our World in Data},
    year = {2023},
    note = {https://ourworldindata.org/how-many-animals-get-slaughtered-every-day}
}
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