
This is a bit more on the issue of Australian crocodile farming that was originally covered by Venus on 12/11/20 – https://worldanimalsvoice.com/2020/11/12/australia-the-crocodile-mafia-expands/
More from ‘The Guardian’, London/
Australian farm to hold 50,000 crocodiles for luxury Hermès goods questioned by animal welfare groups
Farm to supply skins to make handbags and shoes would be one of the biggest in Australia under plan approved by Northern Territory government
The high-end French fashion brand Hermès wants to build one of Australia’s biggest crocodile farms in the Northern Territory that would hold up to 50,000 saltwater crocodiles to be turned into luxury goods such as handbags and shoes.
But the proposal has come under fire from animal welfare groups, who say other fashion brands have moved away from using exotic animal skins on cruelty grounds. Advocates told Guardian Australia they had concerns about the welfare of the crocodiles, and that farming animals for luxury goods was “no longer fashionable.”
The territory, a significant global supplier of crocodile skins, is already home to several crocodile farms owned by major fashion brands.
Northern Territory crocodile industry figure Mick Burns is leading the proposal on a former fruit farm near Darwin purchased earlier this year by the company PRI Farming, of which he is a director.
The NT government has already granted development approval for the project, with documents showing the farm would include an egg incubator laboratory, a hatchery, and growing pens, as well as wastewater treatment plants and a solar farm.
According to documents submitted to the territory’s Environmental Protection Authority, the farm would employ 30 people and build from an initial 4,000 crocodiles to 50,000, which the ABC has reported would make it one of the biggest crocodile farms in Australia.
An EPA statement to the Guardian said the project had been granted environmental approval, and that PRI had also indicated it would apply for a wildlife trade permit.
Dr Jed Goodfellow, a senior policy officer at RSPCA Australia, said the society remained opposed to killing of any animal “where the purpose of their death is primarily to produce a non-essential luxury item like fur or skin”.
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Continue reading “Australia: Australian Farm to Hold 50,000 Crocodiles for Luxury Hermès Goods Questioned by Animal Welfare Groups.”

















