Why and how to regulate animal production and consumption in the EU?
Abstract
Throughout the world, animal production faces huge sustainability challenges. The latter are exacerbated in the European Union (EU) where issues related to climate change, the environment, human health and animal welfare are the subject of intense debates. Besides negative impacts, it is important to recall that animal production and consumption have also economic, territorial and nutritional benefits. In addition, some livestock systems, notably grass-based systems, may also provide positive climatic and environmental services. Animal production is highly regulated in the EU, whereas the consumption of animal products is not (or very slightly) regulated. Numerous negative and positive impacts of animal production and consumption are public goods that are not well taken into account by private actors and markets. As a result, there is legitimacy and scope for public policies aimed at reducing the damage and increasing the benefits of animal production and consumption. The last part of the paper explains how this could be achieved in the EU through a significantly revised and extended Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) that more closely follows the principles of public economics.
Attachments
No supporting information for this article##plugins.generic.statArticle.title##
Views: 4784
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Sarah LAISSE, René BAUMONT, Léonie DUSART, Didier GAUDRÉ, Benoit ROUILLÉ, Marc BENOIT, Patrick VEYSSET, Didier RÉMOND, Jean-Louis PEYRAUD, The net feed conversion efficiency of livestock: a new approach to assess the contribution of livestock to human feeding , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 31 No. 3 (2018): Volume 31: Issue3: Dossier: Feed resources for livestock
- Mohamed Taher SRAÏRI, Vincent CHATELLIER, Christian CORNIAUX, Bernard FAYE, Claire AUBRON, Nathalie HOSTIOU, Alejandra SAFA, Saïd BOUHALLAB, Sylvie LORTAL, Sustainability of dairy development: reflections on a few cases in the world , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 32 No. 3 (2019)
- Élise VANBERGUE, Jean-Louis POULET, Jean-Louis PEYRAUD, Catherine HURTAUD, Cow milk lipolysis updates: determining factors and biochemical mechanisms , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 33 No. 1 (2020)
- Audrey MICHAUD, Sylvain PLANTUREUX, René BAUMONT, Luc DELABY, Grasslands, a source of wealth and support for innovation for more sustainable and acceptable ruminant livestock farming , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 33 No. 3 (2020)
- Vincent CHATELLIER, Dependance of West Africa on dairy product importations , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 33 No. 2 (2020)
- Nathan BALANDRAUD, Claire MOSNIER, Luc DELABY, François DUBIEF, Jean-Philippe GORON, Bruno MARTIN, Dominique POMIES, Anaël CASSARD, Holstein or Montbeliarde: from phenotypic differences to economic consequences at the farm level , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 31 No. 4 (2018)
- Vincent CHATELLIER, Pierre DUPRAZ , The economic performance of European livestock farming: From the "cost competitiveness" to the "non-cost competitiveness" , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 32 No. 2 (2019): Volume 32 Issue 2: Special Issue. Major challenges and solutions for livestock farming
- Jean-Louis PEYRAUD, Joël AUBIN, Marc BARBIER, René BAUMONT, Cécile BERRI, Jean-Pierre BIDANEL, Christine CITTI, Corinne COTINOT, Christian DUCROT, Pierre DUPRAZ, Philippe FAVERDIN, Nicolas FRIGGENS, Sabine HOUOT, Marie-Odile NOZIÈRES-PETIT, Claire ROGEL-GAILLARD, Véronique SANTÉ-LHOUTELLIER, Science for tomorrow’s livestock farming: A forward thinking conducted at INRA , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 32 No. 2 (2019): Volume 32 Issue 2: Special Issue. Major challenges and solutions for livestock farming
- Didier BOICHARD, Sandra DOMINIQUE, Marie BÉRODIER, Sébastien FRITZ, Luc DELABY, Corentin FOUÉRÉ, Mekki BOUSSAHA, Anne BARBAT, Use of sexed semen in cattle production , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 37 No. 4 (2024)
- Vincent CHATELLIER, Internationalization of markets in animal production , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 32 No. 2 (2019): Volume 32 Issue 2: Special Issue. Major challenges and solutions for livestock farming
