Is live animal export illegal?

It’s already illegal. Your voice can help get animals off these death ships — for good. Every animal ‘exported’ for slaughter is an individual.

How do I export live cattle from Australia?

Australian livestock can only be exported by a licensed Australian exporter and cannot be exported to all countries. Livestock exporters must comply with the Australian Standards for the Export of Livestock and other regulations that underpin the Exporter Supply Chain Assurance System (ESCAS) .

Why should live export be banned?

The export of live animals for slaughter is inherently high-risk, with decades of repeated evidence of suffering and cruelty. The RSPCA believes live animal export should be phased out in favour of an increased trade in boxed and chilled meat from animals that have been humanely slaughtered here in Australia.

Does Australia still export live animals?

However, the UN Comtrade database indicates Australia remains the world’s largest exporter of live sheep and fourth largest for live cattle, with the industry employing an estimated 10,000 in regional Australia alone.

Does Australia still export live cattle?

Exporting live animals is currently a legal, highly regulated and ethical practice, despite Australian exporters having made the export industry more humane, activists have tried to ban it. In August 2011, two bills went to the Australian Parliament to end live export due to inadequate animal welfare.

Why should Australia ban exports from live?

Why is live exporting bad?

The export of live sheep, cattle and goats for slaughter gives rise to serious welfare problems — these relate to the conditions animals experience during the journey itself, resulting in extensive suffering and high death rates, and to the treatment of animals once they reach the importing countries.

How is the export of live animals regulated in Australia?

Regulatory regime. The export of live animals is regulated by the Australian Meat and Live-stock Industry Act 1997, the Export Control Act 1982 and the regulations and instruments issued under these Acts.

Is the Australian government requiring live export observers?

The Australian Government currently requires these departmental observers on all live export vessels. The live export industry is in the process of developing a quality assurance program referred to as the Livestock Global Assurance Program as a means of demonstrating compliance with the ESCAS.

Why did the live export trade start in Australia?

The development of the modern live export trade has been accompanied by continuing and significant public and veterinary concern for the health and welfare of transported livestock. Following accidents on livestock carriers in the 1980s, reviews into the trade reported shortcomings in animal husbandry practices and facilities on board export ships.

When did the Australian livestock export accreditation program start?

In 1997, as part of broader structural reforms to the meat industry, the Livestock Export Accreditation Program (LEAP) was implemented as an industry-operated quality assurance system encompassing the Australian Livestock Export Standards (ALES).