Uncertainty among Austrian pig farmers regarding the new animal welfare standards that their government wants to impose

Published May 24, 2024

Tridge summary

The Austrian government passed an amendment to the Animal Welfare Act in 2022, banning slatted floors in pig farms and requiring each pig to have its own resting area. However, a constitutional court ruling reduced the transition period for existing farms from 2040 to June 2025. The government is considering further reducing this period and providing financial support to larger farms. The Austrian Pig Farmers' Association opposes the changes, citing uncertainty and fear of potential closures due to the requirements, which they claim are not met by any other country and exceed neighbor expectations.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Austrian government decided in 2022, through an amendment to the Animal Welfare Act, to ban slatted floors in all pig farms. He also agreed that the pigs had to have their own resting area. In order for this new rule to allow the protection of existing investments and be less traumatic for ranchers, a transition period was set until 2040 for existing farms. The ban is in force from January 1, 2023 for new farms. However, a ruling by the Austrian Constitutional Court (VfGH) at the beginning of January this year ruled that the initially planned transition period of 17 years was too long and not objectively justified. Therefore, the government must now shorten the deadline and has until June 2025 to do so. The Minister of Public Health has proposed shortening the deadline until 2030 and that during this transitional period, farms with the largest budget be financially supported. At the same time, the minister wants to further improve pig farming conditions by providing more pen ...
Source: Agrodigital

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