The Scotsman

Live animal export ban is a resolution the UK must keep

◆ Thirty years after protests began in earnest, the country is on the cusp of making a historic change, writes Philip Lymbery

- Philip Lymbery is chief executive of Compassion in World Farming, a former UN Food Systems Champion and an award-winning author. His latest book is Sixty Harvests Left. He’s on Twitter @ philip_ciwf

So, how are your New Year’s resolution­s going? For many of us, resolution­s revolve around doing more exercise, saving money, or eating better. About a third of us set them, with people in Edinburgh, Liverpool, and London amongst the most enthusiast­ic. But how many good intentions have already fallen by the wayside?

It’s a tradition spanning four millennia since the days of ancient Babylon and was linked to the farming year. For them, the year began in spring with the planting of crops for the year ahead. Resolution­s would be about repaying debt and returning borrowed farm implements. One of the timeliest resolution­s with a farming theme this year is by the UK Government: to ban live animal exports from Scotland, England, and Wales.

It’s been a long time coming. Decades in fact. And it is testimony to what I’ve always believed: that big change in society takes a generation to achieve. As citizen changemake­rs at local community or national level, we should take that as encouragem­ent to keep going with our dreams. To not be put off by immediate barriers and frustratio­ns.

Thirty years ago, we were amidst popular protests against UK live animal exports, whereby over two million sheep, lambs and calves were sent on horrendous­ly long journeys to other countries for slaughter or fattening. Calves often ended up in veal crates, tiny coffin-like boxes where they could never turn around for their entire life.

Now the UK Government has introduced a Bill to end live animal exports for slaughter or fattening forever. So, how is it going? Well, in what I took as a sign of government­al seriousnes­s, I found myself invited to meet with the Prime Minister’s office to discuss plans for a ban. A further indication came when the proposed ban was quickly introduced into parliament.

Cause for Christmas cheer arrived when it passed a crucial hurdle, getting a successful second reading with all-party support. It prompted newsreader and presenter Selina Scott to predict in the

Daily Mail that “by this time next year, happily, the abhorrent live export trade will have ended”. The good news is that no animals have been exported from Britain for slaughter or fattening since 2020. But let’s be clear, that’s reason for celebratio­n, not complacenc­y. Left to its own devices, this cruel trade could well resume. Taking this opportunit­y to stop it once and for all is important to the British public.

Evidence of why action is needed is sadly close at hand; a new report reveals the true scale of the trade in the European Union. Some 44 million farmed animals every year endure needlessly long journeys, some lasting weeks at a time. The EU Commission has published proposals for reform, but these are worryingly weak.

In Britain, 30 years on since those nationwide protests, we have political unity on ending live animal exports, a trade that has long blighted British food and farming. We are now within touching distance of consigning it to the history books. Doing so is one resolution well worth seeing through.

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 ?? ?? It is no longer necessary to send farm animals on long, distressin­g journeys
It is no longer necessary to send farm animals on long, distressin­g journeys

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