England has taken one of the most significant steps in its history of farm animal protection, committing to end the use of enriched cages for laying hens and farrowing crates for pigs — two of the most widely criticized forms of intensive animal confinement in modern agriculture. The move places England among a growing group of nations and territories choosing to set a higher legal floor for how farmed animals are treated.
At a glance
- England animal welfare reform: The government confirmed plans to phase out enriched cages for laying hens and close-confinement farrowing crates for pigs, building on years of campaigning by welfare groups and growing public pressure.
- Laying hens affected: Millions of hens in England are currently housed in enriched cages — larger than the old battery cages banned in 2012 C.E., but still criticized by animal welfare scientists for severely limiting natural behavior such as perching, dust-bathing, and foraging.
- Farrowing crates: These metal enclosures restrict sows almost entirely during and after birth, preventing them from turning around; critics and researchers have long argued the crates cause chronic stress and frustration, while supporters have cited lower piglet mortality rates as a practical concern during the transition.
Why this moment matters
The push to end these practices in England did not happen overnight. Animal welfare organizations, including the RSPCA and Compassion in World Farming, spent decades building the scientific and public case that confinement systems cause measurable suffering. Research from veterinary and ethology communities has consistently found that hens in cages — even enriched ones — cannot perform key behavioral needs, and that sows in farrowing crates show signs of chronic stress.
The European Union banned conventional battery cages in 2012 C.E. England’s new commitment goes further by targeting enriched cages, a reformed system that critics say never went far enough.
The farming industry’s position
The transition will not be immediate, and that is by design. Farmers have raised legitimate concerns about the cost of converting infrastructure, the risk of higher piglet mortality in open farrowing systems, and competitive pressure from imports produced under lower welfare standards. The government has acknowledged these challenges and indicated that phase-out timelines will give producers room to adapt.
Some farming groups have welcomed the clarity a firm commitment provides, even while pushing for adequate transition support. Others remain worried that without border measures ensuring imported products meet the same welfare standards, English farmers will be undercut by cheaper overseas production — a tension that remains unresolved.
A shift in what society expects from farming
Public attitudes toward farm animal welfare have shifted considerably over the past two decades. The U.K. government’s own surveys have repeatedly found that large majorities of the British public consider farm animal welfare important and support higher legal standards, even when informed it may raise food prices.
That shift has created real political momentum. England’s action follows similar moves in the European Union, which is reviewing its full animal welfare framework, and in California, where voters passed Proposition 12 in 2018 C.E., banning the sale of pork and eggs from animals kept in extreme confinement regardless of where they were raised.
What comes next
The practical impact of England’s reform will depend heavily on implementation — the length of phase-out periods, enforcement mechanisms, and whether trade policy shields domestic producers from unfair competition. Animal welfare advocates have welcomed the commitment while pressing for firm deadlines and meaningful penalties for non-compliance.
The challenge of maintaining high domestic welfare standards while managing food affordability and trade relationships is one that governments across the world are grappling with. England’s reform does not resolve that tension — but it does signal that confinement systems once considered standard practice are now on their way out.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Good News for Humankind
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- The Good News for Humankind archive on animal welfare
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