Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries

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Standard

Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries. / Sandøe, Peter; Hansen, Henning Otte; Bokkers, E.A.M.; Enemark, P.S.; Forkman, Björn; Haskell, M.J.; Lundmark Hedman, F.; Houe, Hans; Mandel , R.; Nielsen, Søren Saxmose; de Olde, E.M.; Palmer, C.; Vogeler, C.S.; Christensen, Tove.

I: Animal, Bind 17, Nr. 12, 101009, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sandøe, P, Hansen, HO, Bokkers, EAM, Enemark, PS, Forkman, B, Haskell, MJ, Lundmark Hedman, F, Houe, H, Mandel , R, Nielsen, SS, de Olde, EM, Palmer, C, Vogeler, CS & Christensen, T 2023, 'Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries', Animal, bind 17, nr. 12, 101009. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009

APA

Sandøe, P., Hansen, H. O., Bokkers, E. A. M., Enemark, P. S., Forkman, B., Haskell, M. J., Lundmark Hedman, F., Houe, H., Mandel , R., Nielsen, S. S., de Olde, E. M., Palmer, C., Vogeler, C. S., & Christensen, T. (2023). Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries. Animal, 17(12), [101009]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009

Vancouver

Sandøe P, Hansen HO, Bokkers EAM, Enemark PS, Forkman B, Haskell MJ o.a. Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries. Animal. 2023;17(12). 101009. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009

Author

Sandøe, Peter ; Hansen, Henning Otte ; Bokkers, E.A.M. ; Enemark, P.S. ; Forkman, Björn ; Haskell, M.J. ; Lundmark Hedman, F. ; Houe, Hans ; Mandel , R. ; Nielsen, Søren Saxmose ; de Olde, E.M. ; Palmer, C. ; Vogeler, C.S. ; Christensen, Tove. / Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries. I: Animal. 2023 ; Bind 17, Nr. 12.

Bibtex

@article{d4e894e461ba4c6e947d21085d888a58,
title = "Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries",
abstract = "The only common European Union (EU) legislation set up specifically to ensure the welfare of dairy cattle is for calves. As a consequence, there is wide diversity in how dairy cattle welfare is ensured in EU countries. A few countries have legal requirements for dairy cattle welfare, while in others, it is left to industry standards or niche production requirements, typically linked to various premium labels. In this paper, we compared animal welfare provisions in dairy cattle production across five countries with different combinations of legislative and other approaches: Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Firstly, we aimed to map the diversity of animal welfare initiatives. Secondly, we used the Benchmark method of expert valuations and weightings of the relative importance of individual welfare provisions. We found that Denmark and Sweden have the highest level of dairy cattle welfare provisions as measured by the Benchmark method, partly due to high legislative welfare requirements, followed by the United Kingdom, which has an extensive industry standard with very high uptake. Germany and the Netherlands, on the other hand, have lower levels of documented welfare provisions, and correspondingly a Benchmark score closer to a baseline defined by legal requirements at EU level. We also found differences in what elements of animal welfare were focussed on. Some initiatives emphasised fulfilling the social needs of cattle, while others focused more on space and freedom to move. Also, the countries with the highest Benchmark score had a relatively high level of production of organic and other specialty dairy products. We found the effect of national legislation or ambitious industry standards on dairy cattle welfare to be much larger than previous studies have found in either pigs or poultry. At a time when the EU is considering stepping up its efforts to improve animal welfare in terms of common minimum standards, the results of this study could have important policy implications. The diversity in the level of dairy cattle welfare standards found across countries may speak in favour of having shared minimum standards, both at EU level and globally. However, even among countries with a similar Benchmark score, we found a difference in the kinds of welfare provisions at work, which may make full harmonisation of standards more challenging.",
author = "Peter Sand{\o}e and Hansen, {Henning Otte} and E.A.M. Bokkers and P.S. Enemark and Bj{\"o}rn Forkman and M.J. Haskell and {Lundmark Hedman}, F. and Hans Houe and R. Mandel and Nielsen, {S{\o}ren Saxmose} and {de Olde}, E.M. and C. Palmer and C.S. Vogeler and Tove Christensen",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "Animal",
issn = "1751-7311",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dairy cattle welfare – the relative effect of legislation, industry standards and labelled niche production in five European countries

AU - Sandøe, Peter

AU - Hansen, Henning Otte

AU - Bokkers, E.A.M.

AU - Enemark, P.S.

AU - Forkman, Björn

AU - Haskell, M.J.

AU - Lundmark Hedman, F.

AU - Houe, Hans

AU - Mandel , R.

AU - Nielsen, Søren Saxmose

AU - de Olde, E.M.

AU - Palmer, C.

AU - Vogeler, C.S.

AU - Christensen, Tove

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The only common European Union (EU) legislation set up specifically to ensure the welfare of dairy cattle is for calves. As a consequence, there is wide diversity in how dairy cattle welfare is ensured in EU countries. A few countries have legal requirements for dairy cattle welfare, while in others, it is left to industry standards or niche production requirements, typically linked to various premium labels. In this paper, we compared animal welfare provisions in dairy cattle production across five countries with different combinations of legislative and other approaches: Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Firstly, we aimed to map the diversity of animal welfare initiatives. Secondly, we used the Benchmark method of expert valuations and weightings of the relative importance of individual welfare provisions. We found that Denmark and Sweden have the highest level of dairy cattle welfare provisions as measured by the Benchmark method, partly due to high legislative welfare requirements, followed by the United Kingdom, which has an extensive industry standard with very high uptake. Germany and the Netherlands, on the other hand, have lower levels of documented welfare provisions, and correspondingly a Benchmark score closer to a baseline defined by legal requirements at EU level. We also found differences in what elements of animal welfare were focussed on. Some initiatives emphasised fulfilling the social needs of cattle, while others focused more on space and freedom to move. Also, the countries with the highest Benchmark score had a relatively high level of production of organic and other specialty dairy products. We found the effect of national legislation or ambitious industry standards on dairy cattle welfare to be much larger than previous studies have found in either pigs or poultry. At a time when the EU is considering stepping up its efforts to improve animal welfare in terms of common minimum standards, the results of this study could have important policy implications. The diversity in the level of dairy cattle welfare standards found across countries may speak in favour of having shared minimum standards, both at EU level and globally. However, even among countries with a similar Benchmark score, we found a difference in the kinds of welfare provisions at work, which may make full harmonisation of standards more challenging.

AB - The only common European Union (EU) legislation set up specifically to ensure the welfare of dairy cattle is for calves. As a consequence, there is wide diversity in how dairy cattle welfare is ensured in EU countries. A few countries have legal requirements for dairy cattle welfare, while in others, it is left to industry standards or niche production requirements, typically linked to various premium labels. In this paper, we compared animal welfare provisions in dairy cattle production across five countries with different combinations of legislative and other approaches: Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Firstly, we aimed to map the diversity of animal welfare initiatives. Secondly, we used the Benchmark method of expert valuations and weightings of the relative importance of individual welfare provisions. We found that Denmark and Sweden have the highest level of dairy cattle welfare provisions as measured by the Benchmark method, partly due to high legislative welfare requirements, followed by the United Kingdom, which has an extensive industry standard with very high uptake. Germany and the Netherlands, on the other hand, have lower levels of documented welfare provisions, and correspondingly a Benchmark score closer to a baseline defined by legal requirements at EU level. We also found differences in what elements of animal welfare were focussed on. Some initiatives emphasised fulfilling the social needs of cattle, while others focused more on space and freedom to move. Also, the countries with the highest Benchmark score had a relatively high level of production of organic and other specialty dairy products. We found the effect of national legislation or ambitious industry standards on dairy cattle welfare to be much larger than previous studies have found in either pigs or poultry. At a time when the EU is considering stepping up its efforts to improve animal welfare in terms of common minimum standards, the results of this study could have important policy implications. The diversity in the level of dairy cattle welfare standards found across countries may speak in favour of having shared minimum standards, both at EU level and globally. However, even among countries with a similar Benchmark score, we found a difference in the kinds of welfare provisions at work, which may make full harmonisation of standards more challenging.

U2 - 10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009

DO - 10.1016/j.animal.2023.101009

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37952301

VL - 17

JO - Animal

JF - Animal

SN - 1751-7311

IS - 12

M1 - 101009

ER -

ID: 372960815