2007-03-20 10:16:56 -
LELYSTAD, The Netherlands, March 20 /PRNewswire/ --
- Results From a Welfare Quality(R) Survey
Considerable attention is being given to what consumers can do to improve
farm animal welfare. Linking improvements of farm animal welfare to what
people do as food consumers is essential to realise better animal welfare in
Europe. This recent study shows that such linkages vary considerably across
Europe.
Across Europe, a large majority of consumers say that farm animal welfare
is important. This ranged from 69% of
respondents in the Netherlands, 73% in
the UK, 75% in France to 83% in Hungary and Sweden. Norway and Italy scored
the highest, with 84% and 87% respectively. There is still concern among
consumers, first of all related to conditions in poultry production, but also
to conditions of pigs. Compared to these, people tend to see the treatment of
dairy cows as least worrisome. People are concerned about conditions on the
farm; transportation and slaughtering are also met with concern.
Public opinions differ considerably across the seven countries. Italian
and French respondents are quite worried about welfare conditions in their
own country; concerns are often associated with food purchasing, and trust in
actors in the food sector is relatively low. Hungarians do worry about the
issue and they are also more pessimistic about current trends, but animal
welfare is of less relevance when shopping.
The Dutch display lower general interest, but many worry. Many do think
of welfare conditions when shopping for eggs and beef. Trust in actors is
high. The British show similar patterns, but trust in authorities, market
actors and organisations is much lower.
Finally, the Swedes and the Norwegians are engaged with the issue; they
are trusting and not worried. Particularly in Norway, animal welfare is
rarely associated with the consumer role.
When asked about changes over the last ten years, there is considerable
optimism in most countries. A majority of consumers thinks that conditions
for farm animals have improved, while less than one in five think that the
situation has become worse.
This optimism may be one of many reasons why the researchers found that
the proportions of people who associate animal welfare concerns and worries
with their own purchasing practices are much lower than the general interest
and concern. They may simply not see the need for action. Still quite a few
consumers do think about such issues when shopping for eggs, beef or milk.
These proportions are generally much higher than the market shares for
special animal-friendly products. This indicates a wider consumer definition
of food animal welfare than product labels offer. In understanding this, we
must also consider the products that are on offer in the food markets across
Europe and how they are labelled. Later studies in Welfare Quality(R) will
investigate such topics.
The results of the survey are presented in more detail in a Welfare
Quality(R) report, published by Cardiff University (available in March 2007).
The study was conducted among 10,500 consumers, The findings are based on
representative samples in France, Hungary, Italy, United Kingdom, the
Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden. The study was conducted by by Unni Kjaernes
of the National Institute for Consumer Research, Oslo and seven other
European research institutes/universities: Ashtown Food Research Centre -
Ireland, Cardiff University - United Kingdom, Stockholm University - Sweden,
University of Pisa - Italy, University of Reading - United Kingdom,
Université de Toulouse le Mirail - France, Wageningen University and Research
Centre, The Netherlands.
Earlier studies have indicated that animal welfare can be of considerable
concern among consumers when buying food. Population surveys conducted as
part of the Welfare Quality project explore in more detail the extent of
social engagement in farm animal welfare issues and how this engagement is
reflected in everyday consumption practices across Europe.
This study is a part of the research programme of Welfare Quality(R), a
major research programme funded by the EU in the FP6 research programme. The
project aims to accommodate societal concerns and market demands, develop
reliable on-farm monitoring systems, and develop product information systems
and practical species-specific strategies to assure animal welfare in the
food quality chain. The project is coordinated by Dr Harry Blokhuis,
Wageningen University and Research Centre, the Netherlands.
www.welfarequality.net
Source: Welfare Quality project