Keeping animals pain-free is a fundamental priority for the Australian red meat industry. Standards and guidelines are in place to support the use of pain relief in unavoidable aversive procedures. The beef industry aspires to 100% use of pain relief for these procedures by 2030. (Source)
Caring for our sheep is a focus area of the Sheep Sustainability Framework with a key priority to ‘Reduce, refine and replace painful husbandry practices’ with measurement around the percentage of producers who use pain management at mulesing and the percentage of flocks/producers where pain management is used for castration and tail docking.
The development of effective and practical pain treatments has been a major advance in alleviating the pain during animal husbandry practices such as castration, dehorning, mulesing and tail docking and de-horning, and their use is becoming common practice.
Pain relief products available in Australia for sheep, cattle and goats include fast-acting/short-lasting local anaesthetics and slow-acting but longer lasting analgesics.
Pain relief is now legislated and enforced through penalties in some states and is a requirement of industry quality assurance programs. By 2030, the beef industry aims to have 100% use of pain relief for invasive procedures.
The Australian Beef Sustainability Framework reported in 2021 that 30% of producers always use pain relief when undertaking aversive animal husbandry practices (castration, dehorning, spaying, disbudding).
Furthermore, the percentage of producers using pain relief for specific aversive procedures represents a majority of the cattle herd receiving relief. For example, while 38% of producers always use pain relief when disbudding, this represents 84% of cattle being disbudded in 2020. (Source)
The Australian red meat industry is investing in research to identify ways to reduce pain during animal husbandry procedures. Taking a ‘replace, relieve and refine’ approach, the highest priority is to replace aversive procedures with stress-free, non-invasive procedures. Examples include using genetics to breed out the poll gene in cattle so that dehorning is no longer required. Another example would be the use of a vaccine that causes female sterility to negate the need to surgically spay (or desex) cattle.
If replacing procedures isn’t feasible, second tier research aims to minimise pain of aversive procedures using pain relief.
Thirdly, the industry aims to refine existing procedures by applying a less stressful method in a less stressful way. Examples include devices that provide an anaesthetic as well as analgesic to mitigate pain and stress during castration and tail docking.
Targeted pain relief being administered during necessary lamb husbandry procedures such as castration
The red meat industry has stringent animal welfare standards, and aims to be recognised as world leaders in animal health, welfare and production practices.
The Australian wool and sheep meat industry is working towards phasing out mulesing by finding new ways to spare sheep the agony caused by flystrike.