Andrew Knight videos

How Much Do Chickens Suffer When Gassed With CO2 03:39

How Much Do Chickens Suffer When Gassed With CO2

How Much Does Animal Farming Contribute to Climate Change 04:16

How Much Does Animal Farming Contribute to Climate Change

Consumer Acceptance of Sustainable Dog Food 03:36

Consumer Acceptance of Sustainable Dog Food

Consumer Acceptance of Sustainable Cat Food 03:41

Consumer Acceptance of Sustainable Cat Food

Meat Based Versus Vegan Pet Food: Environmental Sustainability 04:19

Meat Based Versus Vegan Pet Food: Environmental Sustainability

How Should Pigs be Stunned at Slaughter? 04:26

How Should Pigs be Stunned at Slaughter?

How Much do Vegan Diets Improve the Health of Dogs? 06:18

How Much do Vegan Diets Improve the Health of Dogs?

Fox Control Methods Animal Welfare and Ethical Implications 04:45

Fox Control Methods Animal Welfare and Ethical Implications

Should Tigers Be Used Within Travelling Circuses? 07:48

Should Tigers Be Used Within Travelling Circuses?

The Welfare of Backyard Chickens 04:35

The Welfare of Backyard Chickens

Influenza Risks From Pig and Poultry Farms 04:29

Influenza Risks From Pig and Poultry Farms

Cell Based Seafood: Japanese Consumer Views 04:08

Cell Based Seafood: Japanese Consumer Views

Could Vegan Pet Food Help Save the Planet 05:17

Could Vegan Pet Food Help Save the Planet

Are Vegan Diets Good for Cats 05:05

Are Vegan Diets Good for Cats

Meat Chickens and Colony Cages 04:12

Meat Chickens and Colony Cages

Are Vegan Diets Good for Dogs? 05:47

Are Vegan Diets Good for Dogs?

Should Cats and Dogs go Vegan? - Professor Andrew Knight, University of Winchester 01:05:12

Should Cats and Dogs go Vegan? - Professor Andrew Knight, University of Winchester

Educational Animal Use Within Europe 06:03

Educational Animal Use Within Europe

Pet Food Manufacturing 04:35

Pet Food Manufacturing

Vegan Pets Are Just as Happy with Their Meals 03:44

Vegan Pets Are Just as Happy with Their Meals

Greyhound Racing 03:42

Greyhound Racing

Creating a Clinical Skills Laboratory for teaching surgical and clinical skills 02:58

Creating a Clinical Skills Laboratory for teaching surgical and clinical skills

NZALA Report - inconsistencies between the Codes and the Act 04:26

NZALA Report - inconsistencies between the Codes and the Act

The Green Protein Report 03:38

The Green Protein Report

Wildlife Trade - Confiscated Animals 03:26

Wildlife Trade - Confiscated Animals

Efficacy of Alternatives to Educational Animal Use 05:11

Efficacy of Alternatives to Educational Animal Use

Animal Research and Depression 05:17

Animal Research and Depression

Sow farrowing crates NZ 01:39

Sow farrowing crates NZ

Supermarket Chicken and Pandemics 05:35

Supermarket Chicken and Pandemics

Primate Research 04:44

Primate Research

Animal welfare in New Zealand 04:43

Animal welfare in New Zealand

September 27, 2025

Andrew Knight is Professor of Animal Welfare and Ethics, and Founding Director of the University of Winchester Centre for Animal Welfare, and Adjunct Professor in the School of Environment and Science at Griffith University, Queensland. An experienced cat and dog veterinarian, he's also a European, American, New Zealand and RCVS -recognised Veterinary Specialist in animal welfare and related fields. He has around 150 academic and 80 popular publications, and an extensive series of YouTube videos and several websites (including https://www.sustainablepetfood.info), on plant-based companion animal diets, climate change and the livestock sector, invasive animal research, educational animal use, humane clinical and surgical skills training, and other animal welfare issues. He regularly works with animal welfare charities to advocate for animals, and is frequently interviewed by the media. He has received over 20 awards and research grants for this work.

The environmental impacts of pet food (e.g., land use, water use, fossil fuel consumption, greenhouse gas production, pesticide and fertilizer use, and impacts on biodiversity loss), are globally significant. The proportion of ‘food’ animals used in pet food is also significant. All of these impacts are set to rise, due to increasing pet ownership worldwide, and the changing social status of companion animals. However, alternative pet foods based on novel protein sources such as plants and seaweed, insects, yeast, fungi and laboratory grown meat products, are rapidly developing. Vegan pet foods are most developed. These use plant, mineral and synthetic sources to ensure all necessary nutrients are included. In 2020 I surveyed 4,060 dog or cat guardians to investigate determinants of pet food purchasing decisions, as well as health, behavioural and other outcomes on different diets. I also surveyed 29 manufacturers to determine whether nutritional soundness and quality control of plant-based pet foods differed from those of meat-based diets. Results from these and other studies indicate that the healthiest and least hazardous pet foods may be nutritionally sound vegan diets. Detailed analysis of feeding behaviour indicates dogs and cats generally find such diets as palatable as conventional diets. And manufacturers of plant-based pet foods generally appear to adhere to equivalent or better quality control standards. The potential environmental and animal welfare benefits of plant-based and alternative pet foods are significant. Their use is already rapidly increasing, and significant expansion of this sector is expected in the future.