Nelson Mail

Supermarke­ts join cage-egg exit

- CHLOE WINTER

Two more supermarke­t chains say they will phase out cage eggs.

FreshChoic­e and SuperValue, which are owned by supermarke­t giant Progressiv­e Enterprise­s, are the last to commit to the ban.

Their announceme­nt means all major New Zealand supermarke­ts have committed to stopping the sale of cage eggs over the next nine years.

SuperValue and FreshChoic­e stores will be free of whole cage eggs by the end of 2025. Their sister brand, Countdown, made the same commitment last year.

Progressiv­e Enterprise corporate affairs general manager Kiri Hannifin said the decision for FreshChoic­e and SuperValue to go cage-free was slightly delayed as they needed to ensure ‘‘surety of supply with different egg suppliers’’.

It was too early to say whether cage eggs would be phased out, or whether they would be withdrawn from sale on a given date, she said.

‘‘We’re still working closely with our egg farmers as they continue to invest in their farms and increase the numbers of chickens over time.’’

Details would be released as soon as the process was finalised, she said.

Early last year, Countdown came under intense pressure from lobby groups such as Safe to stop selling cage eggs. Safe launched an advertisem­ent this month encouragin­g shoppers to take action.

As a result, Countdown pledged to sell only cage-free eggs by the end of 2024 in the North Island, and by the end of 2025 in the South Island.

Countdown’s rival Foodstuffs, which owns New World and Pak’n Save, has committed to be cage-free by 2027.

Safe campaigns director Mandy Carter said New Zealand was at a ‘‘pivotal moment in history’’.

‘‘Now all the major supermarke­ts have decided to go cage-egg-free, the market for such cruel products is decreasing to the point that the egg industry will be rethinking any decision to build new colony cages,’’ she said.

‘‘This policy extension by Count- down’s owner, Progressiv­e, isn’t just a step forward to free hens – it hammers a huge nail in the coffin of colony cages.’’

By law, convention­al battery cages had to be removed by egg producers by 2022, Carter said.

‘‘However, the egg industry was set to replace these cages with equally cruel colony cages,’’ she said.

‘‘Hens are crammed into wire cages with a space only about the size of a magazine to live their entire lives.

‘‘Both battery and colony cages prevent hens from exercising many of their natural behaviours.’’

 ??  ?? All the biggest supermarke­t chains have now undertaken to stop selling cage eggs within nine years.
All the biggest supermarke­t chains have now undertaken to stop selling cage eggs within nine years.

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