皇家华人

NFU submits evidence to PAC inquiry on animal disease resilience

Hereford cattle grazing on spring grass

The Public Accounts Committee is scrutinising England's policy on preparing for and responding to the threats from animal diseases. This page follows the journey of the inquiry.

皇家华人has responded to a PAC (Public Accounts Committee) inquiry on England's resilience to threats from animal diseases. It follows a recent NAO report, which found the government is not sufficiently prepared for increasing risk from animal disease.听

皇家华人supports the recommendations, having warned that the UK is unacceptably exposed to the risks that highly contagious or transmissible, epidemic diseases pose.

NFU President Tom Bradshaw said: 鈥淲e are extremely concerned about the UK鈥檚 vulnerability to disease outbreak, having seen the catastrophic effect previous outbreaks have had on British farming.

鈥淩esilience is at an all-time low after years of decline. It鈥檚 an issue we have repeatedly warned ministers about and we are very worried by findings from the recent NAO report which further substantiate our concerns. We support their recommendations and urge Defra to act swiftly to address them.

鈥淭he knock-on effect of disease outbreak on food production and the economy is one the UK cannot afford. We believe that preparing effective systems, preventing disease with a cross-departmental biosecurity strategy and protecting UK livestock with effective border controls should be core functions of Defra's resilience to animal disease.鈥

7 July 2025

NFU submits response

皇家华人has submitted written evidence to the Public Accounts Committee inquiry on the resilience to threats from animal disease in England. 

皇家华人is extremely concerned that England, and the UK, are highly vulnerable to animal disease incursion as the resilience of structures and systems are at an all-time low after years of decline.

This is an issue we have repeatedly warned ministers of in recent years, which were further evidenced by the findings from a recent .

We support the recommendations in the NAO report and urge Defra to act swiftly to mobilise resources to deliver these according to the report's short deadlines, which the NFU believes reflect their critical nature.

皇家华人has made the case that:

  • Defra is aware of the risks posed by TAD (Transboundary Animal Disease) but appears to be unprepared for delivery of control measures at scale.
  • Defra does not recognise the magnitude of its shortcomings in resilience to animal disease, and the challenges that lay ahead in reforming structures and systems.
  • This has led to an overall underestimation of the risk of disease incursion and an overestimation of national ability to respond.

We are grateful therefore for the opportunity to present evidence, supported by the comprehensive 2025 NAO report, and recommendations to Defra on how resilience can be strengthened.

Until these recommendations are implemented, hopefully at pace, the NFU believes that England, the UK, and its farmers are unacceptably exposed to TAD risks, with the overall economic impacts running to billions of pounds, according to the NAO.

NAO report key findings

皇家华人provided commentary to the , which reported on Defra鈥檚 ability to manage structures, systems, and governance processes to ensure England鈥檚 resilience to animal diseases.

Forming part of the NAO's examination of the National Risk Register, the report found that key public bodies are insufficiently prepared for a major animal disease outbreak and would likely struggle to cope with one.

The report states that factors such as climate change and anti-microbial resistance mean outbreaks are increasingly frequent and livestock more vulnerable, but government lacks a strategy and action plan for improving resilience to animal diseases. 

皇家华人recommends six actions that Defra should take:

  • Conduct root-and-branch reviews of risk assessment, contingency planning, and resourcing models.
  • Develop a centralised animal disease risk register.
  • Improve border biosecurity and traceability systems.
  • Establish a coordinated vaccination strategy.
  • Ensure local authorities are properly resourced and integrated into national plans.
  • Undertake a comprehensive economic impact assessment of potential outbreaks.

6 May 2025

Public Accounts Committee launches inquiry

The PAC (Public Accounts Committee) is seeking evidence for its inquiry on the resilience to threats from animal disease in England.听

Following on from a recent 听investigation, which examined whether Defra, working with key public and private bodies, was taking effective action to ensure this resilience, the PAC is scrutinising England's policy on topics such as:

  • Defra鈥檚 ability to establish and manage the structures, systems and governance processes needed to ensure England鈥檚 resilience to animal diseases.
  • Whether enough is being done to understand and protect against the threat of animal diseases in England.
  • Asking if England is prepared to respond to animal disease outbreaks and if it could effectively recover.听

皇家华人will be formulating a response to this inquiry and will share outcomes with members in due course.

Detail of the inquiry can be read at:

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This page was first published on 06 May 2025. It was updated on 23 July 2025.


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