Animal Health
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, acting in exercise
of the powers conferred upon her by sections 1, 7, 37, 87(2) and (5) and 88(2) and
(4) of the Animal Health Act 1981, makes the following Order:
S.I. 2003 No 255.
This Order may be cited as the Transport of Animals (Cleansing and Disinfection)
(England) Order 2003.
This Order applies to England only and came into force on 4 March 2003.
This Order revokes and replaces the Transport of Animals (Cleansing and Disinfection)
(England) (No 2) Order 2000 (“the 2000 Order”) (S.I. 2000/1618). This Order, which
extends to England only, implements paragraph 8 of Chapter I of the Annex to Council
Directive 91/628/EEC on the protection of animals during transport (OJ No L340, 11.12.91,
p 17) which was previously implemented by paragraph 26 of Schedule 1 to the Welfare
of Animals (Transport) Order 1997 (S.I. 1997/1480). It also implements Article 12.1(a),
second indent of Council Directive 64/432/EEC on health problems affecting intra-Community
trade in bovine animals and swine (this Directive was consolidated in the Annex to
Council Directive 97/12/EC, OJ No L109, 25.4.97, p 1).
The principal amendments to the 2000 Order contained in this Order are:
(a) clarification that the Order does not require the use of disinfectant inside
the driver’s cab of any means of transport (article 5); and
(b) the addition of a means of transport at a livestock show (subject to certain
conditions) to the circumstances in which article 4 applies rather than article 3
(Schedule 1, paragraph 4).
This Order specifies that, after the transport of any hoofed animals, and domestic
fowls, turkeys, geese, ducks, guinea-fowls, quails, pigeons, pheasants, partridges
and ratites, the means of transport and equipment carried with it must be cleansed
and disinfected in accordance with Schedule 2 before it is used again to transport
those animals (article 3(4)). It also specifies that, even if this has been done,
if the means of transport becomes soiled so as to cause a risk of transmission of
disease, the soiled parts must be cleansed and disinfected again before those animals
are transported (article 3(5)). Following a journey, it requires a means of transport
to be cleansed and disinfected as soon as practicable, but in any event within not
more than 24 hours (article 3(3)). It requires any person transporting such animals
to remove dead animals, litter and excreta from the means of transport as soon as
practicable (article 3(6)).
Article 4 applies to all other animals and birds (but not to non-commercial journeys
or to the transport of single animals or pets) and to the circumstances set out in
Schedule 1 (where article 3 would otherwise apply). These circumstances relate to
journeys on a single enterprise, transport of certain horses, journeys between the
same two points and means of transport at a livestock show. Article 4 reqires that
the animals to which it applies are loaded on to a means of transport which has been
cleansed and, if necessry, disinfected, and that dead animals, litter and excreta
are removed from the means of transport as soon as practicable.
Article 6 specifies how the material removed from the means of transport must be
disposed of.
Under article 7, an inspector is empowered, in the cirumstances set out in that article,
to serve a notice requiring a means of transport to be cleansed and disinfected.
The Order is enforced by the local authority or the Secretary of State (article 8).
Breach of the Order is an offence under section 73 of the Animal Health Act 1981
punishable in accordance with section 75 of that Act.
A regulatory impact assessment has not been prepared for this Order.
A copy of this Order can be obtained from any branch of Her Majesty’s Stationery
Office.