Farmers must prepare for new attestation rules

13 Hydref 2023

Following notification from Welsh Government and Defra in January this year that all farms producing animals will be subject to regular veterinary visits from December 2023, NFU Cymru Policy Adviser Dafydd Jarrett has put together some more information to help members understand the new rules.

In January 2022, the EU’s Animal Health Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/429) introduced a new requirement for farms producing animals or products of animal origin or germinal products for export to the EU (or movements to Northern Ireland) to be subject to ‘regular veterinary visits’. 

Official Veterinarians (OVs) have had to certify compliance with this new requirement since 15th January 2022. As a temporary measure - farmer’s attestation had been in place to maintain trade to the EU. However, farmer self-attestation compromises the RCVS requirements for certification. 

New rules

NFU Cymru still maintain that the farmer self-attestation covers the requirement and in fact would be better as it is the animal keeper’s responsibility to notify any suspicion of notifiable disease to their vet and it is the farmer who tends to their livestock 365 days a year. This unfortunately has fallen on deaf years both with Defra and Welsh Government.

This new requirement implemented by Article 8(e) of Delegated Regulation 2020/692. 

“Must receive regular animal health visits from a veterinarian for the purpose of the detection of, and information on, signs indicative of the occurrence of diseases, including those listed diseases referred to in Annex I relevant for the particular species and category of animal, germinal product or product of animal origin and emerging diseases.”

In 2022 Defra/WG and the RCVS agreed that farmer attestations could only be used as evidence of compliance until 13 December 2023. From this date, evidence of the veterinary visits needs to be passed from the veterinarian on farm to the certifying OV at the end of the food chain. 

Products exported to the EU

For products to be exported to the EU, the producer must have had in the 12 months leading up to 13 December:

  • a veterinary visit or
  • be part of a recognised assurance scheme.

This means farmers need to plan and arrange to have one of the visits in advance of the 13 December 2023 deadline. Without evidence that the farm receives regular veterinary visits, the OV at the slaughterhouse may not be able to sign a Support Health Attestation (SHA) facilitating products derived from your animals to be exported to the EU.

For non-assured farms - the vet visit can be combined with other visits covering routine work, providing that all species present at the premises are considered. The attestation visit can be signed from a retrospective or previous visit, such as a TB test.

VAN number

Farmers do not need to send paper copies of the vet attestation form with each animal or batch of animals which go to market or to a slaughterhouse. It is the Vet Attestation Number (VAN) which ‘travels’ with the animals to markets, slaughterhouses or collections centres.

The Vet Attestation Number (VAN) should be recorded on FCI documentation when an animal or animals move to market or slaughterhouse from last holding of residence.

Extension requested

For practical reasons we have asked government to extend the 13 December 2023 deadline as thousands of non-assured farms have yet to receive a vet visit and by shear vet availability alone it will not be possible to get them all done in two months.

What is a VAN number?

The VAN will comprise of:

  • The visiting vet’s RCVS number
  • County Parish Holding (CPH)
  • expiry date.

For example:
1234567 [MRCVS number]
12/345/6789 [CPH number]
0624 [Valid to the end of June 2024]

1234567-12/345/6789-0624

And just a point to bear in mind, this requirement does not apply to domestic trade but remember that carcasses are sold in parts, and it is highly likely that some parts of carcasses will at some stage be exported to the EU and elsewhere. Also, important to note this relates to all animal species producing meat for export.

Looking to the future of vet visits, they are to become part of the new Sustainable Farming Scheme for scheme participants, a separate annual attestation visit will not then be required. Also, as EID Cymru develops there could be a digital solution to replace the current paper-based system which is open to errors not least with the 18-digit number as illustrated earlier.

Question and answer documents

Defra has put together a question & answer document to help farmers understand the new requirements. You can view the Q&A and the letter to producers below.


Gofynnwch gwestiwn i ni am y dudalen hon

Unwaith y byddwch wedi cyflwyno’ch ymholiad bydd NFU Cymru yn cysylltu â chi ac, os yw’n briodol, bydd eich cwestiwn yn cael ei drosglwyddo i un o’n timau polisi.

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