Better protection for laboratory animals and rules against illegal timber

Published: 16 December 2009 y., Wednesday

Rašymas
At the Council meeting on 15 December in Brussels, the EU agriculture and fisheries ministers discussed animal welfare labelling and better protection for laboratory animals, and reached an agreement on rules against illegally logged timber. The negotiations on the total allowable catch for the most important fish stocks in 2010 are continuing during Tuesday evening.

Rules against illegally logged timber

The ministers reached a political agreement on rules on the obligations of companies selling timber and wood products in the EU. The purpose of the regulation is to minimise the risk of illegally logged timber, or products made from such timber, being released onto the EU market. The proposal concentrates on the first occasion when timber and wood products are made available on the EU market. The rules will oblige those involved to ensure, as far as is possible, that the timber or wood products on the market are legally logged. In other words, the regulation focuses on the actions of the operators rather than on the products.

Better protection for laboratory animals

In the afternoon, the ministers received a status report from the negotiations with the European Parliament on a draft directive aimed at strengthening the protection of animals used in experiments and coordinating the legislation on the protection of animals used for scientific purposes. For example, a requirement is introduced for a basic evaluation of every individual experiment. Breeders and users of laboratory animals will establish a special animal welfare body, which will work with animal protection at local level. In addition, binding rules are introduced on how laboratory animals are kept and cared for, and what methods of destruction may be used. After intensive work all autumn, the Council and the European Parliament have now reached agreement on all the issues. However, certain technical adaptations as a result of the new Lisbon Treaty remain.

Animal welfare labelling and an EU Animal Welfare Reference Centre

The Commission presented a report on different methods of animal welfare labelling and on the establishment of an EU Animal Welfare Reference Centre. In short, animal welfare labelling can be described as labelling on an end product of animal origin, in order to provide the consumer with information such as the conditions under which the animal was kept. The Commission considers that an EU Animal Welfare Reference Centre could work with indicators that can be used to measure animal welfare, and coordinate and encourage research that could form the basis for better animal protection rules.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Don't move just think

Japan - home to almost half of the world's 800,000 industrial robots - has gone one step further and unveiled the world's first technology system that enables humans to control robots by thoughts alone. more »

Shoe that grows with kids' feet

A group of German scientists say they've invented a shoe that grows with the feet. more »

Ozone: Blokland hails the miracle of Montreal

Remember the hole in the ozone layer? In the 1980's there was incredible fear about the cataracts and cancer it could cause if allowed to continue. more »

Robot takes to Tokyo runway

HRP-4C - Japan's first humanoid female robot – is making her debut at Japan Fashion Week. more »

Nanofood - MEPs to debate tougher scrutiny

'Nanofood' doesn't sound incredibly tasty but the chances are that you have already eaten food produced using nanotechnology - the manipulation of materials one-millionth the size of a pinhead. more »

Phelps swimsuit in ban discussion

This is the swimsuit which has revolutionized a sport. Called LZR, the suit is made of advanced materials. Maker Speedo claims athletes can improve their race times by two percent. more »

Naughty chimp's human ways

The 30-year-old chimpanzee is been bombarding park`s visitors with stones and other missiles - and preparing his attacks in advance. It's apparently evidence of intelligence never seen before in an animal. more »

Oldest studest undeterred

Sixty-five year old Jabbar Husen has been studying for a remarkable 43 years - but hasn't given up hope. more »

Better school support needed for migrant children, say MEPs

Specially-trained multilingual teachers and extra funding are needed to help the integration of increasingly high numbers of migrant children in European schools, Culture Committee MEPs said on Thursday. more »

Carvings threaten mammoth research

Figurines carved from mammoth bones can fetch millions of dollars at auction. more »