Good Earth Dairy

Expanding the Market for Exploitation.

From kefir to mango smoothies, this facility is leading the charge in diversifying camel dairy, creating more reasons to keep mothers in a cycle of pregnancy and loss.

Yathroo, Western Australia

PART OF THE DECEPTIVE DAIRY INVESTIGATION

The Story Sold to the Public

Good Earth Dairy markets itself as a modern "superfood" innovator.

They focus heavily on the medical and nutritional claims of camel milk, targeting parents with products like infant formula and fermented kefir as "healthy" alternatives to cow's dairy.

What We Documented

  • Product Diversification at a Cost: Each new product line—from smoothies to powders—requires more mothers to be brought into the intensive 12-to-14-month gestation cycle.

  • The Formula Irony: We documented the marketing of camel milk "infant formula" while calves are simultaneously being denied the very milk designed for them.

  • Intensive Growth: As WA's largest producer, this facility exemplifies the "Growing Industry" trend where animal welfare is secondary to the "profitable agriculture" objective of the PISC.

THE REALITY OF DAIRY

Milk does not exist without reproduction.

Every bottle on a shelf represents:

  • A pregnancy

  • A birth

  • A calf

  • A lactation cycle

Camels are intelligent, social, highly sentient animals. They recognise one another. They form bonds. They grieve separation.

In this system, they are confined, managed and milked.

Calves are born into production.

Individuals become inventory.

Behind the
“Small Farm” Image

Camel Milk Dairy supplies retailers in metropolitan Sydney.

This is not a hobby farm.

It is a commercial enterprise embedded in an urban supply chain.

As demand grows, so does pressure for output.
And as production intensifies, welfare becomes secondary to profitability.

What Consumers Aren’t Told

Camel milk is frequently marketed as natural, healing, and nutrient-dense.

But broader industry research shows:

  • There are no antibiotics registered specifically for camelids in Australia

  • Health issues such as mastitis, intestinal worms and skin conditions have been reported within Australian camel dairies

Consumers are rarely informed:

  • What treatments are used

  • What oversight exists

  • What welfare standards apply

  • What transparency is required

They are sold an image.

Not the system.

This Is Exploitation

Camel Milk Dairy is part of a growing industry that captures, confines and commodifies Australia’s dromedary camels.

Animals once roaming vast landscapes are reduced to production units in holding yards.

Their bodies are managed for output.

Their calves are born into the cycle.

Their identities replaced by plastic tags.

This is exploitation — dressed up as niche agriculture.

This facility reflects a broader pattern of camel commodification.

Don’t Let This Continue.

Animal Liberation is calling for:

• Stronger, enforceable welfare protections for camels
• Mandatory transparency in camel dairy operations
• Independent welfare auditing
• Legislative reform recognising camels as sentient animals — not “resources”

Australian camels deserve protection — not production.

This Doesn’t End Here

Camel Milk Dairy operates because there is demand.
Demand exists because consumers are not shown the full truth.

You can help change that.

Australian camels deserve protection — not production.

Refuse to Fund Exploitation

Choose not to purchase camel milk or camel dairy products.

Expose the Reality

Share this investigation with your community and challenge deceptive marketing.

Strengthen Legal Protections

Support Animal Liberation’s push for enforceable welfare protections and transparent oversight for camel dairies across Australia.