On 5 September 2025, the aWISH Project gathered over 160 participants from the European Commission, industry, NGOs, and academia for a policy workshop on the role of animal-based welfare indicators (AWIs) in EU reform. The focus was on how AWIs, particularly for pigs and broilers at slaughter, can define minimum legal standards and provide tools for monitoring, enforcement, and assurance schemes.
The panel agreed that animal-based indicators are more meaningful than resource-based ones and highlighted the potential of automation at slaughterhouses to capture data at scale. At the same time, speakers stressed the importance of measuring what matters for animals, not just what is easiest. Andrea Gavinelli, Head of Animal Welfare at the European Commission, underlined the challenge of benchmarking indicators across diverse production systems so they are practical, understandable, and acceptable across Member States. Done well, indicators could become the backbone of fair and enforceable welfare legislation.
Breakout discussions identified robust indicators ready for legislation (e.g. broiler footpad dermatitis, pig tail lesions), alongside gaps in areas such as aquaculture, small ruminants, and measures of positive welfare. Participants called for clear guidance, harmonisation across Member States, and communication that is both credible for consumers and realistic for industry.
The workshop confirmed that there is strong momentum: animal-based indicators provide a science-based pathway to raising standards while strengthening enforcement.
Watch now: Workshop Highlights | Minimum Standards and Beyond