Lord Rogan

Senior peer Lord Rogan has called on the UK Government to act to stop the European Union allowing animal remains to be fed to livestock in Northern Ireland.

There has been a ban on feeding processed animal protein to livestock since the BSE crisis in the 1990s.  However, discussions are ongoing about lifting the ban in the EU as early as next month.

Speaking in the House of Lords this afternoon, Lord Rogan said: “The Prime Minister’s decision to sign up to the Northern Ireland Protocol has placed the Province’s agri-food business in an increasingly perilous situation.

“We were promised that Brexit would improve food standards right across the United Kingdom, but this will not be the case if processed animal protein is allowed to enter the food chain in Northern Ireland.”

Advertisement

He asked Rural Affairs Minister Lord Benyon:

“What representations has the Government made to Brussels to stop this policy from being extended into Northern Ireland?

“Can you tell the House if Boris Johnson was aware that the EU’s ban on animal protein was about to be lifted before he agreed to place a regulatory border in the Irish Sea?”

Replying, Lord Benyon conceded that “this was a matter that was announced in May, but it has been under discussion for a long time.”

He told Lord Rogan: “This is a not an issue that is affecting the Northern Ireland Protocol or any other aspect of trade with Northern Ireland,” adding, “we have ongoing discussions with the EU at a scientific and animal heath level and will continue to do so.”

Speaking afterwards, Lord Rogan said he was “alarmed that Lord Benyon had singularly failed to grasp the nature and seriousness of the issue we are facing.”

He added: “Yet again, the UK Government is asleep at the wheel and driving towards a very large wall in relation to Northern Ireland in general and the agri-food sector in particular.”

Advertisement
Barry White
Barry White has worked for communications agencies in London and Yorkshire, serving the needs of clients including DLA Piper, Kingfisher, Severn Trent plc, Deloitte, and RSA Security. He is a former senior press officer at Yorkshire Forward and, for 25 years, has provided professional communications advice to local and national politicians in Westminster, Yorkshire and Northern Ireland.