X
XLinkedinWhatsAppTelegramTelegram
0
Read this article in:

EU: public opinion on animal welfare

An absolute majority of Europeans (94%) are of the view it is important to protect the welfare of farmed animals.

23 March 2016
X
XLinkedinWhatsAppTelegramTelegram
0

The Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety consulted European public opinion to establish current views on animal welfare. The key objectives of this survey are:

  • Understanding the relationship between Europeans and animal welfare.
  • Assessing European awareness and perceived importance of key elements of the animal welfare strategy.
  • Determining European views on availability and recognition of products sourced from animal welfare-friendly production systems.

Some results:

  • General understanding of animal welfare: close to half of Europeans (46%) understand animal welfare to ‘refer to the duty to respect all animals’, whilst slightly less (40%) mention animal welfare ‘concerns the way farmed animals are treated, providing them with a better quality of life’. Interestingly, the proportion of citizens who understand animal welfare as ‘going beyond animal protection’ (18%) is very close to those who actually mention that it is ‘the same as animal protection’ (17%). Moreover, a similar proportion of respondents answer that animal welfare ‘contributes to better quality animal products’ (17%).
  • The importance of protecting the welfare of farmed animals: an absolute majority of Europeans (94%) are of the view it is important to protect the welfare of farmed animals. More than half of respondents (57%) consider it to be “very important” and 37% to be “somewhat important” to protect the welfare of farmed animals.
  • The relevance of better protecting the welfare of farmed animals: 82% believe that the welfare of farmed animals should be better protected than it is now. More than two in five Europeans (44%) hold a stronger view, responding with “yes, certainly”.
  • Communication and education: the absolute majority of Europeans (87%) consider information campaigns on animal welfare to be a good way to influence the attitudes of the younger generation towards animals (48% “certainly” and 39% “probably”).
  • Information about treatment conditions: almost two thirds of Europeans (64%) indicated they would like to have more information about the conditions under which farmed animals are treated in their country.
  • International animal welfare standards: Europeans are more likely to strongly agree ‘imported products from outside the EU should respect the same animal welfare standards as those applied in the EU’ (93%), with almost two thirds of respondents (62%) who “totally agree” with the statement, and a further 31% who “tend to agree”. Nine out of ten respondents (90%) agree ‘it is important to establish animal welfare standards that are recognised across the world’. A similar proportion of EU citizens (89%) agree the ‘EU should do more to promote a greater awareness of animal welfare internationally’.
  • Respecting EU standards: the absolute majority of EU citizens (54%) hold the view that the best method is via certifications provided by the EU. A country level analysis shows that certification by the EU is the lead method mentioned across all Member States. In 16 countries, the absolute majority of respondents support this method.
  • Willingness to pay a premium for animal welfare friendly products: overall, 59% of EU citizens mentioned they would be prepared to pay more. More specifically, more than a third (35%) are prepared to pay up to 5% more and more than one in ten (16%) are prepared to pay 6% to 10% more for products sourced from animal welfare-friendly production systems. Very small percentages of Europeans are ready to pay 11%-20% more (5%) or more than 20% (3% of respondents). However, more than a third of EU citizens (35%) are not ready to pay more and a small percentage mentioned spontaneously (4%) that it depended on the price of the product. Respondents in Sweden (93%), Luxembourg (86%) and the Netherlands (85%) are more likely to be ready to pay more for products.
  • Interest in identifying labels for animal welfare friendly products: more than half of EU citizens (52%) look for these identifying labels when buying products. By contrast, 37% of respondents never or very rarely look for the identifying labels.
  • Current choice of animal welfare friendly products in shops: a relative majority of Europeans (47%, +9 percentage points) do not believe there is currently a sufficient choice of animal welfare friendly food products in shops and supermarkets.

March 2016/ EC/ European Union.
http://ec.europa.eu/

Article Comments

This area is not intended to be a place to consult authors about their articles, but rather a place for open discussion among pig333.com users.
Leave a new Comment

Access restricted to 333 users. In order to post a comment you must be logged in.

You are not subscribed to this list pig333.com in 3 minutes

Weekly newsletter with all the pig333.com updates

Log in and sign up on the list

Related articles

Related products in the shop

The shop specialized in the pig sector
Advice and technical service
More than 120 brands and manufacturers