Frequently Asked Questions

What is the purpose of this map?

We believe that most Australians consider themselves animal lovers, and are opposed to animal cruelty. The fact that they regularly fund this cruelty with their purchases of animal products (see the documentary Dominion) suggests that they do so unintentionally. At the very least, they deserve the opportunity to make an informed decision, to see more than the image presented to them by the animal agriculture industry, of happy animals frolicking in the sunshine before willingly surrendering their lives. Consumers deserve to see what modern Australian farms and slaughterhouses look like, especially when they’re being told that such places are ethical and humane. The emergence of factory farms and high-speed slaughter lines, where cruelty and suffering are not only inevitable but considered acceptable and routine by those who profit from them, can be attributed entirely to consumer demand. Marketing slogans such as “free range” and “sow stall free”, designed to appeal to a public more openly concerned with animal welfare while meaning very little to the animals themselves, are not the answer. Bigger cages or smaller stocking densities do nothing to alleviate the suffering inherent to unnecessary and premature slaughter. By raising consumer awareness and knowledge through forcing industry transparency, demand for animal products will reduce, and fewer animals will suffer. The Repository and Map websites provide consumers with an unprecedented ability to see for themselves the reality of modern animal agriculture. The project takes that almost mythical concept that there are ‘factory farms’ and ‘slaughterhouses’ somewhere out there, and it grounds them in reality and says, here’s exactly where they are, what they are, and what they’re doing. It shows how these horrific places that most people wouldn’t support, have essentially taken over the country. Knowledge is the most powerful asset available for preventing and relieving the suffering of animals. Through knowledge, consumers are able to form independent opinions, and are able to act. This action may be passive, such as no longer choosing to purchase or consume animal products, or it may be more active, in the form of protesting or campaigning against individual facilities of whose existence or proximity they were previously unaware. Beyond the individual, it allows us as a society to have informed conversations about the place of commercialised animal cruelty.

What is the criteria for a facility to be marked/listed on the map?

The map identifies the locations of businesses known or suspected to be engaging in animal cruelty or exploitation, with a particular focus on those partially or completely hidden from consumers, generally falling within the following categories: Factory farms including feedlots and dairies

Slaughterhouses, knackeries, rendering plants, tanneries, 'processing facilities'

Saleyards

Large 'stations' with thousands of animals

Smaller businesses that deliberately use false/deceptive language in their marketing, e.g. "humane" or "ethical", or that represent a niche industry

Breeding, training, and public event facilities for animals used for gambling/entertainment

Captivity-as-entertainment facilities All of these business types share a public interest factor and, by definition, engage in some level of animal exploitation and, typically, cruelty. Whether the businesses are owned by individuals, families, foreign investors, large corporations etc, is irrelevant to their being in the public interest and irrelevant to the capacity to suffer of the animals used by that business. These facilities cover the vast majority of animals used commercially in Australia.

Why are there 'unknown' markers on the map?

Most 'unknown' markers are – based on the infrastructure (e.g. feed silos found at all factory farms, animal loading ramps, sheds matching the typical build of poultry/egg/pig farms, waste lagoons common to piggeries, etc) – likely to be animal agriculture facilities, but until information is found or received confirming them to be a specific type of facility, they are not marked as such. Often this is because it can be impossible to differentiate between broiler, egg, duck, turkey, quail, or pig sheds without further information, although generally piggeries have uniquely defining characteristics. Having the marker displayed as unknown, rather than not displayed at all, allows members of the community to submit information about that facility so that its marker or description can be updated (where the information can be verified).

Where does the data come from?

Public directories, databases, reports, articles – published by government, industry, media

Tipoffs from employees or members of the public

Manual searching of satellite maps

Why hasn't 'X' facility been marked/listed on the map?

If we haven't come across it in the above sources/methods, we don't know that it exists and so won't have marked it. Or, if it doesn't fit the criteria listed above, it will not be marked. For example, a farm consisting of a paddock with a few hundred sheep or cows would not meet this criteria; anyone who goes for a drive can see paddocks with animals in them, so identifying them on a map is not considered to be in the public interest or even feasible, especially given that animals are often moved from paddock to paddock. The types of farms and related businesses identified on the map are those generally hidden to consumers yet integral to the industry, and it is in these facilities where the most common acts of cruelty occur and the vast majority of animals used for food are raised and killed.

My property is marked on the map, how do I get it removed?

If your property has been incorrectly identified as a farm or other type of animal exploitation facility, please let us know using the 'Submit Information' button after clicking on that property's marker. If you no longer operate the business, please let us know using the 'Submit Information' button after clicking on that property's marker, and we will update the marker's description and status to identify that it is no longer in operation. If you still operate the business, but merely want to do so in secrecy without public awareness or scrutiny, your requests will not be honoured.

Doesn't this map just identify the homes of farmers and their families, and encourage harrassment towards them by animal activists?