Farmers Blast EU Policing of Pig, Poultry Rules

UK - NFU Scotland has used a European advisory meeting to challenge Commission officials on their ongoing failures to properly police pig and poultry welfare rules across Europe.
calendar icon 3 April 2013
clock icon 4 minute read

NFUS took part in the Egg and Poultrymeat Advisory Meeting in Brussels last week at which representatives from the Commission’s Food and Veterinary Office (FVO) and its Animal Welfare Unit were questioned on the poor progress on inspections to verify Member States are compliant with the ban on conventional laying cages (introduced in January 2012) and the partial ban on sow stalls introduced at the start of this year.

While the UK met both deadlines, the failure of many Member States to introduce these pieces of legislation on time has been well documented. It remains a huge disappointment to Scottish producers that the Commission has yet to inspect or start to impose penalties on those Member States who are still producing eggs or pigmeat from systems now deemed illegal. That places our producers at a competitive disadvantage.

Speaking after attending last week’s meeting, NFU Scotland’s policy manager for pigs and poultry, Peter Loggie said: "The Commission’s attitude towards inspection and enforcement of these important pieces of welfare legislation remains lamentable and fails to ensure that all producers across Europe are abiding by the same set of rules.

"In the run-up to the laying cage ban at the start of 2012, the Commission's Animal Welfare staff promised inspections of Member States to check their compliance. Instead, inspections of the 13 Member States that missed the laying cage deadline were postponed because they would only have proved what these countries had freely admitted. At the time, we accepted that this was a sensible approach.

"However, 15 months after the laying cage ban was introduced, we still have four Member States – believed to be Cyprus, Italy, Greece and Poland – still failing to comply with the laying cage ban. Despite this, the Commission has still not taken action against any of them, nor against any of the others that were significantly late. Furthermore, another four of those countries that failed to meet the original deadline - Belgium, Hungary, Spain, Portugal - have not had an FVO inspection to establish that they are now compliant and none are scheduled for 2013.

"It was pointed out to the Commission that these Member States have yet to be re-inspected despite being found deficient in their compliance with laying hen welfare rules during previous inspections. As no action seems to have been taken against them, then it is possible that without further inspection they may continue to flout the regulations.

"It appears that lessons from the Laying Hen legislation debacle have not been learnt as Europe’s introduction of the partial sow stall ban at the start of this year is repeating the mistakes. It is a disappointment that no FVO inspections on sow stalls are scheduled during 2013 to check the claims of compliance with the ban.

"At the end of 2012, only five countries in Europe were reported as being fully compliant with the stall ban but within weeks that figure has supposedly risen to 10. Of those countries still not compliant with sow stall regulations, the progress towards compliance has been nothing short of miraculous. In the space of a few weeks, France has gone from just 33 per cent compliant to 72 per cent, Belgium from 45 per cent to 89 per cent, Eire from 57 per cent to 82 per cent and Italy from 69 per cent to 99 per cent.

"That rate of progress should set alarm bells ringing with Commission officials. An NFUS member recently visited a supposedly compliant pig farm in the Netherlands and discovered that sows were not being kept in groups as required by the legislation. Instead, minimal changes had been introduced and pigs were clearly still being left in sow stalls and not being provided with the space required by the EU legislation.

"This simply highlights that a robust inspection procedure is an important tool to check that EU rules are being fairly, and uniformly applied. Greater Commission resources must be directed towards the inspection procedures, backed up by penalty proceedings against those countries where non-compliance with welfare rules continues."

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