Skip to main content
Ethics-sociology-philosophyPain management

Electric shock control of farmed animals: Welfare review and ethical critique

By August 15, 2022September 1st, 2022No Comments

Document type: scientific article published in Animal Welfare

Authors: D. Grumett, A. Butterworth

  

Preview: The available methods of electric shock control or containment of farmed animals are increasing and potentially include: (i) fixed and movable electric fencing; (ii) cattle trainers; (iii) prods or goads; (iv) wires in poultry barns; (v) dairy collecting yard backing gates; (vi) automated milking systems (milking robots); and (vii) collars linked to virtual fencing and containment systems. Since any electric shock is likely to cause a farmed animal pain, any such control or containment must, to be ethically justifiable, bring clear welfare benefits that cannot be practically delivered in other ways. Associated areas of welfare concern with ethical implications include the displacement of stockpersons by technology, poor facility design, stray voltage, coercive behavioural change and indirect impacts on human society and values.

From the Animal Welfare website