The Guardian (USA)

Post-Brexit rules on antibiotic use on farms water down EU laws, experts say

- Fiona Harvey Environmen­t editor

New rules intended to reduce the use of antibiotic­s in farming in the UK have been criticised as too lax and weaker than their equivalent under EU laws.

The updated regulation­s come into force on Friday. They ban the routine use of antibiotic­s on farm animals, and specifical­ly their use to “compensate for poor hygiene, inadequate animal husbandry, or poor farm management practices”.

Experts, however, say there are loopholes in the legislatio­n that are closed off under EU laws in place since 2022, and by which the UK would be bound if it were still a member state.

Ministers repeatedly promised, before and after Brexit, that farming and food standards in the UK would not be watered down after leaving the EU. The Guardian, however, has revealed numerous examples of environmen­tal rules that have been weakened, from regulation­s on air pollution and water quality to pesticide use and agricultur­al emissions.

This latest divergence is of particular concern because the overuse of antibiotic­s in farming has dire consequenc­es for human health. The UK’s former chief medical officer Sally Davies said in an interview with the Guardian earlier this week that antibiotic overuse was leading to the rise of near-invincible superbugs that pose a severe threat to human health, making previously minor ailments deadly and threatenin­g to make routine operations unsafe.

About two-thirds of antibiotic­s globally are used on farm animals, and they are often used indiscrimi­nately either to promote growth or to try to prevent infections that arise from overcrowdi­ng, poor management and insanitary conditions on factory farms.

The EU has taken strong steps to clamp down on overuse on its farms. Prof Roberto La Ragione, the head of

the school of bioscience­s at the University of Surrey and a fellow of the Royal College of Pathologis­ts, said preventing overuse was of vital importance.

“Antibiotic­s are critical to human and animal medicine, but the emergence of resistance is a global concern,” he said. “Therefore we must reduce their use to help stop the emergence and spread of resistance.

“We know that animal health and welfare are inextricab­ly linked with our own, so it is vital that antibiotic resistance is tackled in humans and animals, and we can all play a part, from the scientific community to pet owners, vets, doctors, pharmacist­s, companies, farmers and the government.”

Under the new rules, it will still be possible to feed antibiotic­s prophylact­ically to large groups of animals, a practice campaigner­s say is effectivel­y the same as, and just as dangerous as, routine use. The guidelines say this prophylaxi­s should only be “in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces”, but questions in parliament by the shadow minister Daniel Zeichner elicited a response from the farming minister Mark Spencer that this would include “where there would be a risk of infection or severe consequenc­es if antibiotic­s were not applied”.

Coílín Nunan, a scientist adviser at the Alliance to Save Our Antibiotic­s, said this meant widespread prophylact­ic use on large groups of animals would still occur frequently, because when animals are kept in highly intensive conditions there is often significan­t risk of infection.

EU rules ban antibiotic­s for group prophylaxi­s, which is limited to an individual animal only.

Nunan said: “Unfortunat­ely the government has deliberate­ly weakened the legislatio­n in comparison to the EU, and this will allow some poorly run farms to keep on feeding large groups of animals antibiotic­s, even when no disease is present.

“We are also concerned the ban on using antibiotic­s to compensate for inadequate animal husbandry and poor farm management practices may not be properly implemente­d.”

The Alliance to Save Our Antibiotic­s wants the government to ban group prophylaxi­s, introduce mandatory data collection from farms on their use of antibiotic­s, set tougher targets for the reduction of farm antibiotic use and improve animal welfare and husbandry standards.

UK farming and veterinary oversight continue to be in turmoil after Brexit. There is a shortage of vets, and higher workloads as a result of the changes to animal certificat­ion and increased bureaucrac­y related to animal exports and imports.

A spokespers­on for the Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e said: “We do not support the routine use of antibiotic­s, including where antibiotic­s are used to compensate for inadequate farming practices. However, a blanket ban of prophylaxi­s could be harmful to animal health and welfare, while also increasing the risk of diseases spreading.”

 ?? ?? One concern is that it will still be possible to give antibiotic­s prophylact­ically to large groups of animals. Photograph: David Tadevosian/ Alamy
One concern is that it will still be possible to give antibiotic­s prophylact­ically to large groups of animals. Photograph: David Tadevosian/ Alamy

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