Big cattle farm for meat production

Meat Exhaustion Day

Meat is eating up the planet

Behind every bite of meat lies the silent suffering of billions of animals in factory farms. This cruelty is just one part of a larger crisis – global meat production and consumption are not sustainable for the planet or human health. Factory farming, also called industrial animal agriculture, sustains the excessive global meat consumption at immense ethical, health and environmental costs.

Every year, we reach Global Meat Exhaustion day in the month on June. In fact, on average, 1 person consumes 34 kilograms of meat each year.  This means that for our food system to be sustainable, global meat consumption needs to be reduced by over 50%! However, people living in high-income countries consume much more than what is healthy or sustainable: in countries like the USA, Australia and Western European countries meat consumption can reach 2 kilos per week! These countries of the ‘Global North’  have contributed disproportionately to historical environmental degradation and currently have the economic advantage and capacity to act. These countries need to reduce their meat consumption by up to 80%.

What is Meat Exhaustion Day?

Meat Exhaustion Day determines the day on which the maximum recommended meat consumption per year has been reached, with respect to the earth’s limit (planetary boundaries) and considering human health requirements (health boundaries). The date was calculated by comparing the average meat consumption in each country, to the Planetary Health Diet (PHD) recommendation established by the EAT-Lancet Commission. The PHD diet recommends consuming no more than 16,425 grams (about 36.2 lb.) of meat per year, the equivalent of 316 grams (about 0.69 lb.) of meat per week. To know more about the reduction needs, see our country-specific fact sheets. Read the MED report FOUR PAWS published in 2023, where you can find the global analysis and calculation method.

Are you curious to learn about the impact of your meat consumption?

How is Meat Exhaustion Day relevant to the welfare of animals?

To keep up with high meat demand, over 87.9 billion animals are raised and slaughtered for meat each year worldwide. These animals often live in factory farms and are cruelly transported over long distances. They are forced to spend their life in crowded, dirty places, without sunlight, where they suffer from injuries, diseases and death. Meat Exhaustion Day alarms us of the day when the invisible costs of the current food system, and especially the price animals pay for our eating habits. 

What’s the true cost of our global meat production and consumption?

 Factory farming, which sustains this high meat consumption, is harmful to animals that are commodified, traded, mistreated, and slaughtered throughout a food production chain that causes immense suffering. 

  • 97.6 billion land animals are globally exploited for the food production of meat, milk, and eggs every year.
  • About 74% of all farmed animals are estimated to be kept in factory farming conditions, which adds up to the total of 70.2 billion land animals.

Meat consumption levels are globally too high, especially in high-income countries knows as the Global North. Such overconsumption of meat is not only harmful for farmed animals across the world, it also drives the ecological and human public health crisis. 

  • 1/6th of all man-made greenhouse gas emissions are caused directly by  animal agriculture
  • 77% of the world’s agricultural land is used to produce animal feed, driving massive worldwide deforestation.
  • 40% of the world’s freshwater is used to irrigate farm animal feed.

Human health is threatened by high level of meat intake. The World Health Organization says that processed meat, like sausages and ham, are known to cause cancer. And red meat, like beef and pork, are ‘probable carcinogens’ . In addition, high meat intake is associated with diabetes, high cholesterol, and cardiovascular diseases. 

Public health is perpetually threatened by our current intensive and cruel meat production system. Factory farming puts animals in conditions that cause the onset and transmission of zoonotic diseasesand that increases antimicrobial resistance

What can we do?

Demand an end to animal suffering in the food system. Be aware of factory farms near you and join actions against their local environmental and climate impacts. Join protests for climate and animal welfare and against new farms, like our FOUR PAWS office in the UK does.

Personally choose alternatives to meat. Reduce meat intake, adopt and encourage diets that fit within planetary and health boundaries. Replace meat with protein-rich legumes, and try out plant-based alternatives to meat.

Meat Exhaustion Day Around the World

In order of which country reached it first

World
Needed reduction: 52%

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Global Meat Exhaustion Day 


Reached in 2026: June 24th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 34.8

Factsheet (2026)

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USA 
Needed reduction: 81%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in the US


Reached in 2026: March 12th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 84.9

Factsheet (2024)

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Australia
Needed reduction: 81%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in Australia


Reached in 2026: March 12th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 85.0

Poster (2025)

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Austria
Needed reduction: 72%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in Austria


Reached in 2026: April 14th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 58.1
 
Factsheet (2024)
| EN

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UK
Needed reduction: 69%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in UK


Reached in 2026: April 23rd
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 53.5

Factsheet (2025)

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France
Needed reduction: 73%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in France


Reached in 2026: April 11th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 59.9

Factsheet (2024) FR

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The Netherlands
Needed reduction: 69% 

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Meat Exhaustion Day in the Netherlands


Reached in 2026: April 19th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 52.7  

Factsheet (2025)

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Germany
Needed reduction: 70%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in Germany


Reached in 2026: April 20th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 54.9

Poster (2025) DE
Factsheet (2024) EN

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Switzerland
Needed reduction: 65%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in Switzerland


Reached in 2026: May 7th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 47.3

Factsheet (2024) DE | FR | EN

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South Africa
Needed reduction: 64%

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Meat Exhaustion Day in South Africa


Reached in 2025: May 10th
Average meat consumption per person per year in kilos: 43.9

Factsheet (2024)

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How is Meat Exhaustion Day relevant to the welfare of animals?

High meat consumption levels means that high numbers of animals are being slaughtered to be consumed in an intensive production system known as factory farming. Farm animals are bred and live in bad conditions that subject them to suffering.

Broiler chickens inside factory farming

Let's End Factory Farming Now


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