Abstract

Despite the EU’s claim to lead the world on farm animal welfare, much of the EU livestock sector is industrial with poor welfare standards. Moreover, the crowded, stressful conditions of industrial livestock production contribute to the emergence, spread and amplification of pathogens, some of which are zoonotic. Industrial production is dependent on the routine use of antimicrobials to prevent the bacterial diseases that are inevitable when animals are kept in poor conditions. This leads to the emergence of antimicrobial resistance in animals which can in turn be transferred to people, so undermining the efficacy of the antimicrobials that are so important in human medicine. In order to reduce disease risk and save our antibiotics, we need to move to ‘health-oriented systems’ for rearing animals in which good health is inherent in the farming methods rather than being propped up by routine use of antimicrobials. Industrial livestock production is also dependent on feeding human-edible cereals to animals who convert them very inefficiently into meat and milk. 57% of EU cereals are used to feed farm animals. Industrial production’s huge demand for cereals has fuelled intensive crop production which with its monocultures and agro-chemicals has led to soil degradation, overuse and pollution of ground- and surface-water, and biodiversity loss including sharp declines in pollinators and farmland birds. We need to transform the role of animals; they only make an efficient contribution to food security when they are converting materials we cannot consume – e.g. grass, crop residues, by-products and unavoidable food waste – into food we can eat. We need to move to regenerative agriculture such as agroecology which can minimise the use of pesticides and fertilisers, while in some cases, enhancing productivity by supporting and harnessing natural processes.

Highlights

  • Despite the EU’s claim to lead the world on farm animal welfare, much of the EU livestock sector is industrial with poor welfare standards

  • The Farm to Fork Strategy recognises the environmental degradation being caused by intensive agriculture and it promises to reduce the use of pesticides by 50% and the use of fertilisers by at least 20% by 2030 and to restore biodiversity

  • Intensive livestock production is dependent on the routine use of antimicrobials to prevent the diseases that are inevitable when animals are kept in poor conditions

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Summary

Animal welfare

The Commission’s Farm to Fork Strategy promises to revise EU legislation on farm animal welfare. The Court of Justice of the EU has ruled in the Zuchtvieh case (C-424/13) that in the case of live exports, the Regulation on the protection of animals during transport continues to apply even after the animals have left the EU; it applies all the way through to the destination in the non-EU country This Court of Justice ruling is regularly ignored by transporters, most Member States and the European Commission. . A recent overview report published by the European Commission on live exports by road states that most transporters do not meet EU rules on the protection of animals during transport after leaving the EU.. The Scientific Opinion published by EFSA in October 2019 highlights the serious welfare problems that are inherent or common in the stunning of poultry in the electrical waterbath.. Often we have asked the European Commission to replace this inhumane method but they refuse to take any effective action

Environmental considerations
The need to move to new ways of farming
Doughnut economics
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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