EU to Enforce Better Animal Transport Conditions

EU - The European Parliament has pushed through measures to tighten up enforcement controls for the welfare of animals in transport.
calendar icon 17 December 2012
clock icon 3 minute read

In a resolution passed last week, the MEPs said that existing rules have to be enforced properly, inspections stepped up and more dissuasive penalties on offenders imposed.

To avoid long journeys to abattoirs, the EU should promote the use of local ones and consider an eight-hour cap on journey times, they added.

"Mahatma Gandhi said that the greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way it treats its animals. We should do everything in our power to reduce their suffering. Our call for measures to cut transport times for animals, including a concrete step towards setting an eight-hour limit for transport of animals for slaughter proves that we do care for their wellbeing", said rapporteur Janusz Wojciechowski (ECR, PL). The resolution was adopted with 555 votes in favour, 56 against, and 34 abstentions.

The numbers of animals transported within the EU rose substantially in 2005-2009 - by 70 per cent, in the case of pigs. One-third of these journeys took eight hours or more.

To remedy persistent animal welfare problems in transport, existing legislation in all EU member states must be properly and uniformly enforced, MEPs insist. More on-the spot inspections should be carried out and national sanctions against rule-breakers should be harmonised and made far more dissuasive, they say.

Measures to restrict the time taken to transport animals to slaughter to eight hours should be considered, but geographical and science-based exceptions for certain species must be allowed, says the text.

However, an eight-hour journey limit would not by itself suffice to improve animal welfare, which often depends more on proper vehicle equipment and on the good handling of animals, MEPs note.

Parliament therefore calls for science-based improvements in transport conditions, including space and water allowances.

To avoid unnecessarily long-distance transport of animals, the EU should help to create short and transparent food supply chains and take measures to halt the decline of small, local abattoirs and promote local processing, MEPs add.

Further Reading

Go to our previous news item on this story by clicking here.
© 2000 - 2024 - Global Ag Media. All Rights Reserved | No part of this site may be reproduced without permission.