Fast Food, USA

Opinion Brief

Burger King's shift to cage-free eggs: A game-changer?

The massive fast-food chain promises to offer more humanely produced food. Is this a tipping point in the movement toward better treatment of livestock?

Burger King's shift to buying eggs that come from free-range chickens may win over more customers than create more cruelty-free conditions for the birds.

Burger King's shift to buying eggs that come from free-range chickens may win over more customers than create more cruelty-free conditions for the birds. Photo: Wayne Hutchinson/AgStock Images/Corbis SEE ALL 56 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  Green Biz, Blisstree, Mother Nature Network

Burger King is winning praise from animal-rights activists after announcing Wednesday that by 2017 it will only buy eggs and pork that come from cage-free animals. Currently, just 9 percent of the chickens that produce BK's eggs and 20 percent of its pigs are cage-free. "Many tens of thousands of animals will now be in better living conditions," says Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United States. Burger King is the world's second-biggest fast food chain, so the shift is expected to expand the market for humanely produced food and pressure rivals to follow suit. Is this a "game-changer"?

This will revolutionize the industry: Burger King uses hundreds of millions of eggs every year, says Bruce Kennedy at Green Biz. And now the chain will be a huge customer for cage-free farms. It can cost an extra 40 cents to produce a dozen cage-free eggs now, but thanks to the economies of scale that will come with Burger King's business, those costs should fall, making "it easier for other restaurants to buy them, too."
"Burger King goes cage-free: What it means for egg suppliers"

But it will barely benefit chickens: This feel-good move is mostly an attempt to "win over consumers," says Hanna Brooks Olsen at Blisstree, and grab customers back from McDonald's, which beat Burger King to the punch by getting rid of inhumane gestational crates for its sows. Unfortunately for laying hens, the "'cage-free' label is basically meaningless." Many cage-free birds are still kept in crowded, dark barns, and never see the light of day. This is a "half-measure," at best.
"Burger King pledges to go 'cage-free' ... too bad it's a meaningless label"

It's no cure-all. But it's an improvement: Eliminating cages "isn't guaranteeing cruelty-free conditions," says Robin Shreeves at Mother Nature Network, but it's a "step in the right direction. After all, many cage-free hens are starved and have part of their beaks burned off. Still, they have it better than other chickens. They can at least spread their wings, and lay their eggs in nests. Let's hope the applause over this move inspires other fast-food chains and Burger King to continue making humane changes.
"Burger King pledges to use cage-free eggs. What does that mean?"

 
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opinion brief

Burger King's healthier menu: Can BK launch a comeback?

The house that Whopper built shakes things up by offering smoothies and salads alongside its artery-clogging burgers and fries

Burger King is giving its menu a healthy makeover, adding salads, wraps, and fruit smoothies alongside its calorie-heavy Whopper.

Burger King is rolling out 10 new dishes — the largest expansion of its menu since the venerable burger chain first opened its doors in 1954. The additions include smoothies, snack wraps, and salads, and are notable for being much healthier than Burger King...

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opinion brief

Can Taco Bell own breakfast?

The Mexican-inspired restaurant chain is targeting the morning market. But can it lure customers away from McDonald's?

Taco Bell's "First Meal" is the Mexican fast food chain's foray into breakfast with menu items including a sausage and egg wrap and egg burritos.

Taco Bell is joining a "mad scramble" of fast-food chains competing for the growing breakfast-on-the-go crowd. The Mexican-inspired franchise business announced Thursday that it is rolling out a morning menu of breakfast burritos, hash browns, cinnamon buns, and... More

opinion brief

Burger King's home delivery plan: A 'couch potato's dream'?

America's No. 3 burger chain is testing a new plan to get its mojo back: Delivering Whoppers to your door

Have it your way, at home: Burger King is testing out home delivery on select items at several Washington, D.C.-area fast food joints.

Burger King may have lost its spot as the No. 2 U.S. burger chain to Wendy's, but it's not taking its demotion sitting down. (McDonald's is still comfortably No. 1.) BK is borrowing a page from the pizza playbook and rolling out home delivery of its signature... More

opinion brief

Heinz's new 'high-tech' ketchup packet

A new condiment container debuts at fast food restaurants across the country. But do we really need to make it easier to dunk French fries?

Heinz's new "Dip and Squeeze" ketchup containers may make the industry-standard tiny packets obsolete, but could also encourage bad eating behavior.

After years of customer dissatisfaction over tiny, tough-to-tear ketchup packets — and a decline in sales of French fries at fast food drive-throughs — H. J. Heinz Co. has finally developed an alternative. New "Dip and Squeeze" packets are shaped like... More

opinion brief

Should food stamps be redeemable at Taco Bell?

Fast-food chains are lobbying the government for permission to accept food stamps. Not on your life, say anti-obesity advocates

Taco Bell and sister brands KFC and Pizza Hut want government permission to accept food stamps in what critics say would amount to government-subsidized obesity.

With government-issued food-stamp benefits more than doubling — to $64.7 billion — between 2005 and 2010, more and more businesses are trying to get in on the action. Outside of a few states, restaurants traditionally have been excluded. But now Yum... More

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