Eccles, Stephanie Mary Rose (2025) Producing and Valorizing Industrial Animal Waste: Climate Change Related Disasters and Waste-to-Energy Projects. PhD thesis, Concordia University.
![]() |
Text (application/pdf)
1MBEccles_PhD_W2025.pdf - Accepted Version Restricted to Repository staff only until 1 April 2027. Available under License Spectrum Terms of Access. |
Abstract
As consensus sharpens regarding the socioecological and climate harms perpetuated by industrial capitalist animal agriculture, corporate-driven,
government-subsidized efforts intensify. In this dissertation, I examine the role of industrial animal wastes in these efforts, analyzing how waste management practices function as accumulation strategies. I draw from interviews and fieldwork conducted in North Carolina and British Columbia and insights from political ecology, agrarian studies, waste studies, and animal geographies. This manuscript-based dissertation centers industrial animal waste management practices in the context of the agricultural industry framed as both a victim of and contributor to the climate crisis. I examine how waste-to-energy projects convert biowaste into contested renewable energy through anaerobic digesters. In North
Carolina, unwavering government support enables the pig industry to capitalize on the energy transition. By tracing the political developments that fostered the alliance between “Big Agriculture” and “Big Energy,” this research argues that biogas projects perpetuate patterns of uneven racialized development. These patterns are evident in the legacies of the sprayfield lagoon system and the Smithfield Agreement, where efforts to phase-out these waste systems were undermined in favour of extracting value. Central to this process is the systemic devaluation of the bodies, environments, and futures of racialized, Indigenous, and low-income
communities. In addition, I explore the production and management of industrial animal waste during climate change-related disasters. I argue that waste management logic, informed by confinement practices, shapes disaster governance. Institutional policies disincentivize mitigation, rewarding inaction through disaster relief mechanisms. Specifically, I engage with the emergence of post-disaster waste economies and processes, where value is derived from the decomposing bodies of farmed animals through the recovery of energy and nutrients. Together,
these findings highlight the persistence of agricultural exceptionalism, which entrenches industrial practices and delays the adoption of socially just, sustainable practices, particularly by situating it as an emerging key player in the energy transition. This dissertation demonstrates how industrial animal agriculture's waste management strategies intersect with environmental injustice, energy transitions, and climate-induced disasters, underscoring the need for interdisciplinary research and cross-movement organizing to resist the entrenchment and expansion of industrial animal agriculture through waste frontiers.
Divisions: | Concordia University > Faculty of Arts and Science > Geography, Planning and Environment |
---|---|
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
Authors: | Eccles, Stephanie Mary Rose |
Institution: | Concordia University |
Degree Name: | Ph. D. |
Program: | Geography, Urban & Environmental Studies |
Date: | 9 January 2025 |
Thesis Supervisor(s): | Turner, Sarah and Stoddard, Elisabeth |
ID Code: | 995106 |
Deposited By: | Stephanie Eccles |
Deposited On: | 17 Jun 2025 14:12 |
Last Modified: | 17 Jun 2025 14:12 |
Repository Staff Only: item control page