Last week, the Swedish Meat Industry Association (Kött och Charkuteriföretagen, KCF) held the second of its autumn webinars, exploring how artificial intelligence and automated data collection could strengthen animal welfare in slaughterhouses.
This initiative emerged from a meeting of the European Livestock and Meat Trading Union (UECBV) in December last year, at which Jarissa Maselyne presented how applying AI can promote better animal care in slaughterhouses. Ulrika Novell from the Swedish Meat Industry Association described the presentation as highly inspiring and later invited Jarissa to share her expertise with KCF’s member companies in a dedicated webinar.
During the webinar, Jarissa Maselyne, representing the EU-funded aWISH project, explained how AI is being used to measure and improve the welfare of pigs and poultry destined for slaughter. The project aims to develop practical indicators and tools that can be used throughout the production chain, from breeding to transport and slaughter. This will create a more consistent, data-driven approach to monitoring animal welfare.
Representatives from Deloitte also demonstrated how existing camera equipment in slaughterhouses can be combined with AI to identify and follow up on key animal welfare indicators.
The webinar, which was held online for KCF members, demonstrated how technology and research can work together to support cutting-edge animal welfare. By bringing together EU research projects such as aWISH and industry-focused solutions from companies like Deloitte, KCF is helping its members to explore practical, concrete examples of how AI and automated data collection can contribute to better animal care in everyday operations.
