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BIONÆR-Bionæringsprogram

Improving animal welfare regulatory compliance in dairy and pig farming

Alternative title: Forbedre etterlevelse av regelverket for dyrevelferd (i meieri- og svineproduksjon)

Awarded: NOK 8.0 mill.

Project Manager:

Project Number:

342205

Application Type:

Project Period:

2023 - 2026

Funding received from:

Subject Fields:

Partner countries:

Promoting good animal welfare is enshrined in law, a key objective of the Norwegian livestock industry, and an important public justification for providing economic support to farmers. Yet despite an extensive regulatory and legal framework, firm commitments to good animal welfare from key stakeholders, and routine on-farm assessments conducted by the Norwegian Food Safety Authority (NFSA), persistent welfare issues remain in virtually all types of animal production. Why do these persist and how can we assist the inspection services to make positive changes? Research into understanding why farmers are not fully compliant with welfare regulations has tended to focus on socio-psychological factors such as attitudes and values and how they determine discrete compliance outcomes. WELFARM is part of a growing body of research that views animal welfare outcomes not as the result of farmers’ attitudes towards discrete behaviours, but as part of the “farm culture” – an interaction between the animal, human and material parts of the farm that can lead to declining or improving animal welfare situations. Understanding these cultures, it is argued, can help us resolve non-compliance issues by better reflecting the complex environment from which welfare outcomes emerge. Focusing on the dairy and pig sectors, WELFARM will develop an in-depth understanding of farm welfare cultures, establish a typology of farmers based on risk of non-compliance within the farm culture, identify best-practice communication for responding to non-compliance, and develop an indicator toolkit to assist welfare administrators from the NFSA to identify at risk farmers and farm cultures. The overall impact of the project will be to reduce levels of non-compliance in Norwegian agriculture as well as generating new scientific knowledge on farm welfare cultures that can be used to develop better approaches to compliance both within Norway and internationally. The project startup meeting was held in June 2023 at Ruralis in Trondheim where the Work Packages and plans for progressing them were presented to the group. Following a year of establishing the WPs and interactions within the group, the project meeting for 2024 was held on the 22nd of May. The focus of this meeting, held at NMBU in Ås, was for the WP leaders from Ruralis to present plans for fieldwork to the veterinary partners from SLU and NMBU for feedback and refinement. In 2023 Welfarm also began collaborating with NMBU on a PhD for a Mattilsynet employee – funded via another source. The Project Leader of Welfarm is part of the supervisory team and the involvement with the Welfarm project is intended to assist with boosting the social science component of the PhD. The PhD will be engaged with the WPs wherever complementary interests can be found. At this stage, all WPs are about to undertake field work. These will involve (a) developing an in-depth understanding of welfare and compliance cultures, (b) developing a farmer risk typology, and (c) observing inspections of farms to assess inspector-farmer interactions. Early results of the fieldwork will be available in 2025.

Promoting good animal welfare is enshrined in law, a key objective of the Norwegian livestock industry, and an important public justification for providing economic support to farmers. Yet despite an extensive regulatory and legal framework, firm commitments to good animal welfare from key stakeholders, and routine on-farm assessments conducted by the Norwegian Food Safety Authority (NFSA), persistent welfare issues remain in virtually all types of animal production. Research into understanding why farmers are not fully compliant with welfare regulations has tended to focus on socio-psychological factors such as attitudes and values and how they determine discrete compliance outcomes. WELFARM, on the other hand, is part of a growing body of research that views animal welfare outcomes not as the result of farmers’ attitudes towards discrete behaviours, but as part of the “farm culture” – a complex interaction between the animal, human and material parts of the farm that can lead to declining or improving animal welfare situations. Understanding these cultures, it is argued, can help us resolve non-compliance issues by better reflecting the complex environment from which welfare outcomes emerge. The project will involve developing an in-depth (ethnographic) understanding of farm welfare cultures, establishing a typology of farmers based on risk of non-compliance within the farm culture, identifying best-practice communication for responding to non-compliance (motivating farmers to comply), and developing an indicator toolkit to assist welfare administrators from the NFSA to identify at risk farmers and farm cultures. The overall impact of the project will be to reduce levels of non-compliance in Norwegian agriculture as well as generating new scientific knowledge on farm welfare cultures that can be used to develop better approaches to compliance outside of Norway.

Publications from Cristin

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Funding scheme:

BIONÆR-Bionæringsprogram