This afternoon in the House of Commons, Caroline Spelman announced that the UK Government is to proceed with a badger cull.  This is a contentious decision and I’m sure one that she will have thought long and hard about.  It cannot have been easy, the coalition was committed to pursuing a cull but there are also strong arguments against.  The Secretary of State is in a difficult place.

I will try to set out my thoughts on why ultimately I think we all lost today.  First, let’s make it clear bovine TB is a serious disease that is having a huge impact on cattle farming throughout the south and west.  It must be devastating for farmers to lose their herds to this disease.  Almost 25,000 cattle were slaughtered last year at a huge emotional cost to farmers and financial cost to the taxpayer.  So, it is serious and we need to find effective, sustainable solutions.  Yes, that is solutions in the plural as there is no one silver bullet. 

I also think it is beyond doubt that badgers play a part in the transmission of this disease. Not the only part and probably not the main part, but they are involved.  Mrs Spelman was keen to stress to the Commons that no other country had eradicated bTB without addressing the so called ‘wildlife residue’.  That may be true, but culling is not the only option and there are significant questions over whether culling is practicable and effective.

One of the key aspects of this issue relates to how badgers respond to culling.  These stripey-headed creatures normally live in social groups.  When their population is disrupted by culling, animals move around more, often fleeing from the culled area, with badgers from outside entering the area to fill the void.  This stirring up of the population is called perturbation and it is important because detailed research on culling shows that it increases disease transmission. So the incidence of bTB in badgers may actually be increased by culling.  Culling in the initial stages can increase the level of bTB in cattle, particularly in the immediate vicinity.  The detailed science that has been carried out suggests that badger culling will bring about reductions in bTB if carried out across a big enough area (at least 150 km2) for four years and in a co-ordinated and highly synchronised way.

The science is not that rosy in terms of making a real difference though. After 9.5 years (culling over a four year period and 5.5 post culling) bTB in cattle was reduced by around 12.4% across the 150km2 and a 2km perimeter around this area. This means that even after the effort of this culling, not to mention the killing of many badgers, more than 85% of the problem is left unaddressed.

But the problems do not stop there.  The scientific research used a carefully controlled method of cage trapping and humane dispatch carried out by trained staff in a highly synchronised way.  Most of the culls were carried out over 8-11 days.  Those that were carried out over  longer periods were less effective - no doubt due to perturbation.  The scientists who carried out the work were keen to point out that using different methods in an unco-ordinated way could make matters worse rather than better.  It is therefore of great concern that the Government is proposing to allow farmers to use the untested method of shooting free ranging badgers over a period of up to 6 weeks. We believe this is a high risk strategy that could backfire.

The Government is proposing a trial cull in two areas to test assumptions on whether large enough numbers of badgers can be shot safely and humanely.  We have doubts that a one-year trial under carefully controlled conditions will reflect what will be achieved over any wider cull that is proposed next. 

Why has the Government diverted from the science?  In a word - cost.  It is cheaper to shoot in the open than to trap. It is cheaper or easier to do it over a longer period than in a controlled, synchronised way.  It is a high risk strategy that could be a recipe for perturbation.

But there is an alternative.  Rather than stirring the badger population, we should be jabbing it.  An injectable badger vaccine has been developed and is being deployed on a small scale.  Detailed field trials have shown that vaccination is effective in reducing the number of badgers testing positive to bTB by 74%

It is cheaper than cage trapping and culling badgers, though more expensive than the untested shooting of free ranging badgers.  It also has several very important advantages over culling.  It doesn’t lead to perturbation, it doesn’t risk making TB worse, it doesn’t need to be administered in a highly synchronised way and it is an approach that has widespread public support.

It won’t be a solution on its own, it would need to be carried out alongside cattle testing, movement controls and improved biosecurity measures. When available, an oral badger vaccine and cattle vaccination should replace it.

The Government has announced that £250,000 will be made available to support vaccination in each of the next three years but this, whilst welcome, is too little.  It is half the anticipated policing costs of the trial cull.  How bizarre is that?

The Government’s costings suggest that a badger cull will cost farmers more than it will save them in bTB outbreaks.  I believe that, rather than passing the buck and most of the cost to farmers, the Government should have taken the lead by accelerating a programme of vaccination.  This would be a publicly acceptable, sustainable alternative to a high risk and divisive badger cull.

But what about you?  What do you think? Do you think today's decision helps farmers or badgers or neither?

It would be great to hear your views.

  • Martin, Can I back Sooty up (we do agree on most things) and say that I found your entry very informative and appropriate.  My concern with this one is that even when the Vets Association supported this announcement they said it would cut Tb by 10%.   Noone out there seems to be getting to grips with the other 90% which has then to be down to cattle owners.  In the past I sense an attitude that said 'cull the badgers and everything will be OK'.  As you say badgers are only one part of this and apparently not a large part.  Luckily Tb seems to be decreasing even without a cull. I personally can see nothing wrong with a different approach that traps badgers, tests them and only culls the reactors (the same as we do to cattle).

  • Thank goodness I'm a member of (and work for) an organisation which speaks up for wildlife and bases it's arguments on sound science!  By standing together, maybe we can pull something back from the sadness of today's news.  Our Old Moor twitter pages are certainly seeing lots of comments against the government's decision.

  • Thanks Sooty.  Given the complexity of the issue, I felt it was sensible to lay out the arguments in full today.

  • Wow Martin,think this is one of the most interesting and informative blogs I have seen.As a retired dairy farmer who always had Badgers on the farm without any trouble but seeing BTB getting ever closer to that farm livestock and Badgers because to a Badger lover it is the same thing it is and was a continual worry.Lets put it another way Badgers are undoubtedly the big problem as those people who go on the attack and say cattle movement cause it well they need to study the draconian rules for moving cattle which are of course law and no sane farmer brings untested stock on his farm.The only thing is testing effective which is out of farmers control but it was always relatively effective before we stopped limited culling in late 90s so have no reason to doubt that.We should look at this in another way and that is if it was affecting domestic animals there would definitely be a different outlook on it and the public would look at it differently.

    There is massive emotional stress when someones animals are slaughtered and of course just as bad or worse you cannot sell anything except for slaughter until I think it is 3 clear tests which under the circumstances that the disease is around is extremely difficult.There is then the risk of it returning and taking more animals.There is no doubt that culling can if done thoroughly work but it means colossal loss of life.Assuming your figures correct and I feel sure they would be as they must be well researched then it beggars belief why we are not well into vaccination.

    Logic tells me that the large majority of farmers are quite happy to live with clean badgers or they would have taken things into there own hands and there would not be many Badgers and to put it crudely but so that it can be understood it is not more difficult to do to Badgers than what is happening to Hen Harriers although of course with H H it is not farmers.

    I have probably only said what I think most farmers think.Really they desperately need a solution for cattle and Badgers so from your figures vaccination is the way forward,the strange thing is we the farming community are told we are a decade away from a reliable vaccine.