Horse News

Irish Horse Disposal Plan Being Considered?

Source: The Irish Times

“We have really tightened up the rules since the horse meat scandal…”

Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney is considering the introduction of a humane slaughtering scheme for horses. Photograph: Dan Sheridan/

The Minister for Agriculture said there was “dramatic reduction” in the number of horses being slaughtered since the controversy began in January and there was potentially a welfare issue for horses that were worthless but could not go into the food chain because they had received the veterinary drug bute. Procedures were not tightly enforced before the scandal and it was believed that horses were slaughtered without the necessary checks.

Mr Coveney told the Oireachtas Committtee on Agriculture that some 24,000 horses were slaughtered in factories last year while just 6,500 have been slaughtered this year. “We have really tightened up the rules since the horse meat scandal which has resulted in a reduction of the number of factories slaughtering horses and also a very, very tight system now in terms of micro-chipping, identification and passports and so on,” Mr Coveney said.

Fine Gael TD Pat Deering asked if Mr Coveney was considering an amnesty for horses that were not eligible for slaughtering. He said large number of horses would be under severe pressure this winter because their owners may not have feed for them. But Mr Coveney said it was “out of the question” that he would allow horses without appropriation identification to be slaughtered for human consumption.

“We are not going to allow a single kilo of horse meat into the food chain unless it has been rigorously tested,” he said. “I’m not going to reward anybody for having a large number of horses that aren’t micro-chipped. But having said that, if people have horses at the moment that they can’t feed and they have no outlet and no market for those horses and there’s likely to be a welfare problem as a result of that, well, then we have to act on that and we will,” he said. “Whether they need to be slaughtered humanely, or whether they need some other appropriate treatment, well obviously we’ll look at that”.

He also encouraged people to contact the Department of Agriculture’s welfare help line if they could not afford to feed their animals. “Don’t do something crazy like shoot them in the yard. Give us a call and we will help you deal with that problem,” he said.

Mr Coveney was speaking to the committee during a pre-Budget briefing. He said the Department of Finance had asked the Department of Agriculture for savings of about € 54 million, € 28 million of which would have to come from current expenditure. “Obviously right up until Budget day we will be trying to change those figures where possible,” he said.

Mr Coveney also noted that while the exchequer figures released today showed an under-spend in the Department of Agriculture, most of this money would be spent by the end of the year.

“We’re anticipating at the moment that, if there’s an under-spend at the end of the year, that could be a figure of …at most € 10 million, mainly on the capital side and that will be money that we will carry over to next year if we can. But given the fact that we have a total expenditure of well over € 1.2 billion, you’re talking about a very small percentage.”

Several committee members raised concerns about the plight of suckler farmers who received a significant cut to their incomes with the demise of the suckler cow welfare scheme.

Fianna Fáil deputy Éamon Ó Cuív said other schemes should be pared back if necessary, in order to support the suckler herd. Sinn Féin’s Martin Ferris said the cuts to suckler farmers had “devastating consequences” and the knock-on effects would be damaging for the entire sector if people left suckler farming.

Mr Coveney also defended the department’s actions in clawing back payments from farmers who had over-claimed for EU schemes. The over-claiming only became apparent following introduction of a more accurate mapping system across Europe. “This is public money and if we don’t claw it back, the European Commission will claw it back and they will claw it back with penalties,” he said.

6 replies »

  1. What is it about “some” horse owners that don’t believe they have a responsibility to humanely euth their charges?

    OK to dump them as an unqualified food source; but not to euth and responsibly bury, compost, render, cremate, etc.

    I just don’t get it.

    Like

  2. With this news this could be a start to an ending of horse slaughter. Its about time that actually someone with power cared about the people and how they are fed. Everyone knows horse slaughter is very wrong or it would not be such a hush hush type of business. Most businesses have there dealings during the day but it seems our poor horses are only transported at nights when the public cant see

    Like

  3. “Don’t do something crazy like shoot them in your yard…” he said. Quite honestly, that comes closer to humane euthanasia than sending them to the slaughter house. I’d take that option, for myself or my horse, any day—over making that long, terrifying trip into the kill box, slipping and sliding in the blood of horses killed before me, sensing the horror that was about to happen, getting a captive bolt in my head multiple times, and still maybe being conscious while I was strung up to have my throat slit. Being shot in my backyard definitely sounds like a better option…and certainly less “crazy.”

    Like

    • I completely agree with you, Gail. I’ve got several horse owning friends who are old-time cowboys and to a one they all say that sending their “work partners” to slaughter would be a cowardly act, instead of shooting them, or paying a couple hundred for euthanasia. If someone owns a horse, for any purpose, they should set aside money for the end of that animal’s life.

      Like

    • You’re absolutely right, Gail! Your description of their horrifying experience, says it all and it’s certainly not the way any horse should end their life, for any reason!

      Like

  4. Maybe there should be another way for the Irish Horse as an alternative to dying. Charity begins at home and Mr Coveney should support places that have rescued horses and rehabilitated them. My horses carry the visitors in Donegal and work in the tourism industry, happy to trek and fed as they should be on the land that belongs to them. Small businesses like the one I want to start give a chance to those unwanted animals to give pleasure to others to ride and enjoy the Irish experience on horseback. I can’t save them all but if likeminded people come to visit and support other economies in different areas of the world like where I live then at least we wouldn’t lose them all. Innovate Ireland …and start supporting our horses like this website does to help. Ireland just pushes it’s horses to some other country to kill,
    maybe they should take responsibility for their grant aided breeding programmes that over bred horses in the Celtic Tiger years and give something back to the forgotten problem of starvation and abuse that has been ignored until it hit the food chain.

    Like

Care to make a comment?

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.