Nocton Dairies' initial application aroused much opposition, including an
Early Day Motion signed by 172 MPs in the
House of Commons on 8 March 2010; it was labelled by media reports at the time as a 'battery' farm for cows, and Nocton Dairies' explanations that their housing plans mirrored the open housing systems in which all British cows were already kept for the winter months. After concerns were voiced over the potential for pollution of the water aquifer, smells, animal welfare, disease control, security, transport issues and property blight surrounding the site, some local people formed a campaign group named CAFFO (Campaign Against Factory Farming Operations). A Number 10 e-petition, calling for a public inquiry into the development, was signed by 1,234 people in three weeks before the web site was closed for the duration of the 2010 UK election period. However, a later Government response emphasised the rigors of the planning process and current UK legislation ensuring high welfare standards. Animal welfare charities and campaigners, and vegan and vegetarian groups also joined to support the case against the dairy. A
Facebook group set up by
Viva! calling for a halt to construction attracted over 7,500 members. WSPA (now called
WAP) launched a campaign in September 2010 in anticipation of the resubmission of Nocton Dairies' proposal, featuring celebrities including
Twiggy,
Andrew Sachs,
Chrissie Hynde,
Jenny Seagrove and a large number of soap stars, and attracted over 25,000 pledges from people around the world that 'factory milk from battery cows' would not be used in their cuppas. The results of an
Ipsos MORI survey released at the launch showed that 61% of those questioned said they would never buy milk produced in large-scale indoor dairy sheds.
Compassion in World Farming's 'Cows belong in fields' campaign was launched late 2010, and the
CPRE also campaigned on the issue. As well as this, a campaign was set up through site
38 Degrees who submitted a petition of over 50,000 signatures to the district council in January 2011 on the basis that the farm was cruel and would put other farmers out of business. 38 Degrees also singled out neighbouring farmers who had been keen to use the 'digestate' (left from the cow manure after anaerobic digestion had taken place) on their arable land as a more sustainable and natural source of fertilisers and to replace essential organic matter. These farmers pulled out of their agreements due to fear of reprisals after being named in adverts which urged the public to target them directly. However, a letter sent by the
Farm Animal Welfare Council to government ministers stated that cow welfare need not be compromised in large dairy units, a message echoed by the
RSPCA, which, despite not permitting year-round housing for dairy cows within its Freedom Foods standards, Other debates range around the potential for a large dairy such as this to improve food security and opportunities to reduce the
carbon footprint of milk production through better efficiency and the adoption of technology such as
anaerobic digestion. More recently the Government has published its Foresight report on Food and Farming, and the dairy's developers have asserted that their plans would help address the report's conclusions that farming needs to produce more food using fewer resources while tackling climate change. During the consultation period, the Council reported as many as 14,000 objections had been lodged with
PETA claiming responsibility for at least 6,000 CIWF 5,000, and other animal and vegan groups claiming many more; this was substantiated by an extensive social media campaign orchestrated by these groups against the proposal. However, this was countered by growing dairy industry support for the Nocton proposal, illustrated in submissions from the
National Farmers Union (England and Wales) (NFU), the
Country Land and Business Association, and Dairy UK, representing processors and farmers. ==Supermarket views==