BOTH AIRLINES OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS TOO

Korean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA) have facilitated the air transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan. Through cargo operations associated with these airlines, heavy draft horses are shipped on long flights to Japan before being fattened and killed for meat.

We are calling on both airlines to end their role in this trade — and until they do, we are calling for a boycott of Korean Air and All Nippon Airways – both airlines offer passenger flights originating in Canada and the USA.

If you are ready to speak up, the easy-to-send email tools below allow you to contact their leadership directly and make your position clear.

If you’re new to this issue and would like more background first, keep reading — the full explanation follows.

Email Korean Air

Fill in your details and click “Open Email.” Your email app will open with the letter pre-filled and ready to send.



Email All Nippon Airways (ANA)

Fill in your details and click “Open Email.” Your email app will open with the letter pre-filled and ready to send.



Thank you for taking action.

If you’d like to understand exactly why this boycott matters — and what these flights involve — we’ve laid it out clearly below.

WHAT MOST CANADIANS & AMERICANS DON’T REALIZE…

Most Canadians do not realize that horses are not only slaughtered within Canada — they are also exported live by air for slaughter overseas. Japan is the primary destination.

The horses shipped from Canada for slaughter are heavy, muscular draft horses — including Belgians, Percherons, and draft crosses — bred for showing, driving competitions, farm and carriage work, and sale into Amish and Mennonite communities as working horses.

For years, the public was told these horses were purpose-bred for meat. But in an interview with the publication, ‘Ontario Farmer’, Kevin Wilson — widely described as the largest facilitator of these exports — referred to many of them as “surplus” horses.

That word ‘surplus’ matters.

Because horses not originally raised within a meat production system are not managed under strict food-animal drug protocols. They are treated as horses — with wormers, anti-inflammatories, and phenylbutazone (“bute”), medications clearly labeled as not permitted for animals entering the human food chain.

When those same horses are later deemed “surplus” and redirected into the export pipeline, they carry treatment histories that were never intended for meat production.

AND THEN THERE IS HOW THEY ARE TRANSPORTED

The way these horses are shipped bears no resemblance to the care given to race or sport horse traveling within Canada or internationally for competition or sale.

Performance horses travel in individual metal air stalls, fitted with protective gear, accompanied by dedicated grooms, monitored throughout the journey, and provided regular food and water.

Draft horses bound for slaughter are loaded three or four at a time into wooden crates and transported as cargo.

From the time they leave the feedlot for the airport, through loading, flight, unloading, and transfer after landing in Japan, they are not provided food or water.

Canadian regulations permit horses to be transported for up to 28 hours without feed, water, or rest — and flight schedules and delays can push transport times to, and many times beyond, that limit.

This is not what humane transport looks like.

THE AIRLINES INVOLVED

Two of the airlines that have facilitated these shipments are Korean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA).

These are not obscure freight operators. They are major international passenger airlines with recognizable brands and loyal customers.

All Nippon Airways operates direct passenger flights from Vancouver to Tokyo and serves major U.S. cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Houston, and New York.

Korean Air operates passenger routes from Vancouver and Toronto to Seoul and flies extensively from U.S. hubs such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, Chicago, New York, Atlanta, and Honolulu.

These are airlines families use for vacations, business trips, and visits with loved ones.

Most passengers have no idea that the same corporate entities have facilitated the transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan.

But once we know, we have a choice.

Airlines respond to revenue and reputation. When customers speak clearly — and when enough customers choose differently — companies listen.

WHAT CAN YOU DO?

We are calling on Korean Air and All Nippon Airways to end their role in transporting horses from Canada to slaughter. Until that happens, we are asking travelers to book with other airlines and to make it known why.

If you are planning travel to Asia, choose an airline that does not participate in this trade.

If you care about animal welfare, share this information and start the conversation.

If you want policy to change, lend your voice to the growing call for transparency and humane reform.

Ending live horse exports from Canada will require public pressure, political will, and corporate accountability.

That pressure begins with informed consumers.

And it grows when people decide that convenience will no longer outweigh conscience.

P.S. If you believe this work matters, please consider supporting it.  We are a volunteer-run organization — no salaries, no paid executives — and every dollar goes directly toward public education, outreach, research, and policy advocacy aimed at ending slaughter of horses within Canada and live horse exports from Canada for slaughter.

Your support helps keep this issue in front of decision-makers and moves us closer to real reform.

JUST IN CASE THE FORMS ABOVE DID NOT WORK FOR YOU…

LETTER 1

To: Korean Air

Send To (Email): customersvc@koreanair.com

Website: https://www.koreanair.com

Phone (Canada): 1-800-438-5000

Phone (Korea HQ): +82-1588-2001

Canadian Office (Toronto – Passenger Sales Office):

Korean Air
Suite 2101, 150 King Street West
Toronto, ON M5H 1J9
Canada

Head Office (Seoul):
Korean Air Lines Co., Ltd.
260, Haneul-gil, Gangseo-gu
Seoul 07505
Republic of Korea

Letter Text

Subject: Request for Action — End involvement in live horse exports from Canada for slaughter

Dear Mr. Cho and the Executive Leadership Team at Korean Air,

I am writing as a concerned traveler regarding Korean Air’s role in transporting live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan.

Public records and documented flight tracking have shown that heavy draft horses — including Belgians, Percherons, and draft crosses — are being exported by air from Canada for slaughter.

These long-haul shipments expose horses to extended confinement, food and water deprivation permitted under transport regulations, and significant welfare risks.

While cargo operations may be handled separately from passenger services, Korean Air is a single corporate brand in the eyes of the public. Many customers would be deeply troubled to learn that an airline they trust for international travel has been involved in facilitating this trade.

I respectfully urge Korean Air to publicly commit to ending any involvement in the live export of horses from Canada for slaughter.

Until such a commitment is made, I will be choosing other airlines for international travel and encouraging others to do the same.

Sincerely,

[Full Name]
[City, Province/State, Country]
[Email]

———-

LETTER 2

To: All Nippon Airways (ANA)

Send To (Email): csr@ana.co.jp

Website: https://www.ana.co.jp

Phone (North America Reservations): 1-800-235-9262

Phone (Japan HQ): +81-3-6704-5555

Canadian Office (Vancouver – Passenger Sales Office):

All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd.
Suite 1800 – 200 Burrard Street
Vancouver, BC V6C 3L6
Canada

Head Office (Tokyo):

All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd.
Shiodome City Center
1-5-2 Higashi-Shimbashi
Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-7133
Japan

Letter Text

Subject: Corporate Responsibility Concern — End involvement in live horse exports from Canada for slaughter

Dear Executive Leadership Team at All Nippon Airways,

I am writing regarding All Nippon Airways’ corporate association with cargo operations that have transported live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan.

These shipments involve heavy draft horses exported on long international flights under conditions that many members of the public consider inconsistent with humane treatment. The practice raises serious ethical and reputational concerns.

Although passenger and cargo operations may be structured separately, All Nippon Airways and its affiliated cargo services operate under a shared corporate identity. Consumers increasingly expect airlines to uphold responsible standards across all divisions of their business.

I am respectfully asking All Nippon Airways to publicly commit to ending any involvement in the transport of live horses from Canada for slaughter.

Until that commitment is made, I will be choosing other airlines for my travel and encouraging others to do the same.

Sincerely,

[Full Name]
[City, Province/State, Country]
[Email]

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HORSES SLAUGHTERED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Every year thousands of horses are routinely slaughtered in Canada, for human consumption, but you can help us ban horse slaughter in Canada and beyond.

Some of the meat is consumed in Canada, and much of it is shipped to the European Union, and other markets, including Japan.

This barbaric practice is currently not legal in the United States, so horses from the United States are shipped to Canada, and to Mexico, to be slaughtered.

In addition Canada allows for the transportation of live horses to Japan to be slaughtered for human consumption, and unfortunately the transportation of horses destined for slaughter within Canada, and by air to Japan for slaughter, is far from humane.

LEARN MORE HERE <==

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0% goes towards salaries. Yes, ZERO.

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BAN HORSE SLAUGHTER

FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION OR ANY PURPOSE
DONATESHOP TO SAVE HORSES

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