ʼһhas again met with the RSPCA and RSPCA Assured to follow up on discussions that took place between the organisations in November 2023.
ʼһensured that active egg producing members were present at that meeting to voice their continued concerns.
In an online article published to coincide with the meeting, which took place on 22 January, RSPCA Assured announced that the new standards have been revised to remove an implementation date for verandas for free range producers.
The RSPCA and RSPCA Assured announced that they will jointly engage with the poultry sector to conduct an in-depth review of installing verandas on free-range systems before any future requirement for verandas is considered appropriate.
The veranda requirement remains for all barn producers with a deadline of implementation set for 1 January 2030.
On the provision of natural daylight, the original timeline has been extended giving RSPCA Assured laying hen members seven years to implement the new standards in their entirety, which they state gives time needed to “allow increased engagement with industry and members”.
Way forward must be discussed with producers
NFU Poultry Board chair James Mottershead said:
“It’s right that RSPCA Assured is amending its new standards for laying hens after initially introducing them without sector consultation.
“British poultry farmers are always striving for high standards of bird welfare on farm. For that to happen, any proposed changes to standards must be made in collaboration with producers to ensure that they are practical and workable and, critically, that they are backed by relevant and robust scientific evidence to deliver an actual improvement in bird welfare.
“We are strongly urging RSPCA Assured to pause the introduction of new standards until appropriate trials have taken place on UK farms. This is particularly important for standards that require a significant level of investment as UK producers are still recovering from crippling production costs which led to a shortage of British eggs last year, resulting in imported eggs filling the gap on some supermarket shelves.
“ʼһhas been working with the RSPCA and RSPCA Assured since they announced these new standards in November and we welcome their intention to build back trust and engagement with the egg sector. This must now be followed up with a clear engagement plan, including a genuine two-way discussion with producers.”
ʼһbelieves in a core set of principles for farm assurance when developing new standards. Central to this is that all standards should be developed in collaboration with the wider industry, with producers at the heart of this development phase.
A lack of consultation with the poultry sector could lead to impractical standards being imposed upon farm businesses and it is crucial that RSPCA Assured brings the poultry sector together, including producers, to discuss a way forward, because new standards are no use if producers can’t afford to deliver them.
ʼһremains focused on ensuring that any new standards are properly consulted on before introduction and must have a demonstrable benefit to bird welfare which is supported by relevant science and evidence.