- Government introduces Bill to formally recognise animals as
sentient beings
- Animal Sentience Committee will put animal sentience at heart
of government policy
- Bill introduced as part of government’s first of a kind
Action Plan for Animal
Welfare
Vertebrate animals will be recognised as sentient beings for the
first time in UK law thanks to the introduction of the Animal
Welfare (Sentience) Bill, introduced in Parliament today.
The legislation will also ensure that animal sentience is taken
into account when developing policy across Government through the
creation of a Animal Sentience Committee which will be made up of
animal experts from within the field.
By enshrining sentience in domestic law in this way, any new
legislation will have to take into account the fact that animals
can experience feelings such as pain or joy. The Bill will
underpin the Government’s Action Plan for Animal
Welfare, which launched yesterday and sets out the
government’s plans to improve standards and eradicate cruel
practices for animals both domestically and internationally.
The Bill’s introduction, fulfilling a key Manifesto commitment,
will further the UK’s position as a world-leader on animal
welfare. Now that we have left the EU we have the opportunity to
remake laws and go further to promote animal welfare by making
sure that all Government departments properly consider animal
sentience when designing policy, covering all vertebrate animals
from farm to forest.
The Animal Welfare (Sentience) Bill will:
- formally recognise animals as sentient beings in domestic law
- establish an Animal Sentience Committee made up of experts to
ensure cross departmental government policy considers animal
sentience
- ensure Government Ministers update parliament on
recommendations made by the Animal Sentience Committee
Launching the Bill, Animal Welfare minister said:
The UK has always led the way on animal welfare and now that
we’ve left the EU we are free to drive for the highest
standards of animal welfare anywhere in the world.
Formally recognising in law that animals are sentient and
experience feelings in the same way humans do is just the first
step in our flagship Action Plan for Animal Welfare which will
further transform the lives of animals in this country and
strengthen our position as a global leader.
Claire Bass, Executive Director of Humane Society
International/UK said:
45 of the UK’s most respected animal protection organisations
have been united in calling for this Bill, which recognises
that animals have the ability to experience feelings, including
pain, joy and fear, and that their emotions and welfare deserve
consideration and protection when laws are made.
The formation of an Animal Sentience Committee is a very
welcome step; it must though be designed with the right
expertise, independence, resourcing and access to information
to enable it to provide robust and constructive scrutiny. We
hope that it will support government’s delivery of a
progressive welfare strategy built on respect for the needs of
sentient animals, who enrich and improve our lives in so many
ways.
James West, Senior Policy Manager, Compassion in World Farming,
said:
Compassion in World Farming warmly welcome today’s publication
of legislation that recognises animals as sentient beings –
capable of experiencing joy, pain and suffering. We applaud
this initiative that will apply to policies being developed
across all UK Government departments.
We look forward to the newly established Committee being
effective in ensuring that Ministers pay all due regard to
animal sentience when formulating and implementing policy. As a
nation of animal lovers, we should not expect anything less
than granting sentient beings the legal recognition they
unequivocally deserve.
The UK has a long history of improving the lives of animals,
being the first country in the world to pass legislation to
protect animals in 1822 with the Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act
and later the landmark Protection of Animals Act in 1911.
The Government has continued to uphold this tradition of high
welfare standards over the years through many reforms, ranging
from banning the use of battery cages for laying hens and
introducing compulsory CCTV in slaughter houses and most recently
raising the maximum
sentence for animal cruelty from six months to five years.