²ÝÁñÉçÇø

Badger culling to continue in England as deadline scrapped

Defra Secretary Therese Coffey made it clear she did not agree with her predecessor’s ‘arbitrary deadline’ on ending the badger cull

clock • 1 min read
Badger culling will continue in England.
Image:

Badger culling will continue in England.

Badger culling will continue in England for as long as necessary, with Secretary Therese Coffey confirming there was ‘no set end date'.

In an exclusive interview with ²ÝÁñÉçÇø Guardian from her office at Defra's headquarters in London (September 12), Ms Coffey made it clear she did not agree with her predecessor's ‘arbitrary deadline' on ending the badger cull.

With bTB herd incidence rates tumbling since the start of intensive culling in high risk and edge areas of England, she stressed there would be no deadline.

"We will keep culling for as long as we need to keep culling and there might be areas of the country where there might still be seepage and we will assess that and if we start to see problems in different parts of the country we will consider culling there too," she said.

See also: More news on bovine TB

Science 

"This is not about some shoot up badgers fest, this is about trying to make sure we use science and epidemiology appropriately and back our science but ultimately we have to support our farmers to get through this difficult time."

The Secretary of State's strong stance will be welcomed by farmers in England who have been concerned by the looming deadline and intention to phase out culling in favour of badger and cattle vaccination, announced by George Eustice in 2020.

Speaking at the Back British Farming event in Westminster today (September 14), Farming Minister Mark Spencer added: "We have made huge progress in hitting bTB with everything we have got, particularly in the south west and now is not the time to stop throwing everything at it.

"That will include vaccination and working with biosecurity on farm. But we have got to use every tool and follow the science not the calendar."

Axial Flow 6150 X-Flow. x

£±Ê°¿´¡

CASEIH AXIAL FLOW 7150

£±Ê°¿´¡

NEW CLAYDON 7.5M HARROW

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on Farm Business

Letters: "Get the plough out and farm every last inch of your farm like it's World War Three"

Letters: "Get the plough out and farm every last inch of your farm like it's World War Three"

Ben Stanley, Derbyshire, writes about delayed SFI payments and how those who missed out should think themselves lucky

²ÝÁñÉçÇø Guardian
clock 29 April 2025 • 2 min read
Workers and families 'devastated' as Arla plans to close Settle milk plant

Workers and families 'devastated' as Arla plans to close Settle milk plant

GMB Union said Arla's decision to relocate production from Settle to Lockerbie by 2026 could see 130 employees lose their jobs at the North Yorkshire dairy facility

clock 29 April 2025 • 5 min read
Farming Matters: "There are steps we can take as farmers to influence farm profitability"

Farming Matters: "There are steps we can take as farmers to influence farm profitability"

This week's opinion from throughout the world of agriculture: Caroline Millar, who grows malting barley, oats, and wheat on the family farm in Angus, as well as producing Scotch Beef and Scotch lamb. She is also sector lead for Scottish Agritourism

clock 28 April 2025 • 3 min read