Recommendations & Conclusions
20 items
2
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Not enough is being done to tackle the high level of vet vacancies within APHA, which limits its ability to respond to an outbreak. APHA struggles to recruit and retain sufficient vets. APHA’s vet vacancy rate fluctuates– it was 20% in April 2025, but it had fallen to 15% in …
Government response. The government is establishing a government veterinary services working group to create a workforce strategy and will consult on reforms to the Veterinary Surgeon’s Act. It also provided specific milestones for digital transformation, including a customer contact form by spring …
HM Treasury
3
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
APHA’s surveillance activities to detect disease outbreaks early are not sufficiently comprehensive or risk-based. Surveillance work, or ‘eyes and ears on the ground’, is vital to help detect new and re-emerging disease threats quickly and stop their spread. But APHA’s focus on responding to current outbreaks has resulted in a …
Government response. APHA is implementing initiatives including an Animal By-Product Risk Matrix Review and a Private Veterinary Laboratory Project (due March 2026) to enhance surveillance. It will set out a clear plan and milestones within six months and, by February 2027, will …
HM Treasury
4
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
APHA has not made fast enough progress with modernising its systems and processes, to allow it to better deploy its resources. Many of APHA’s systems and processes are outdated and inefficient. For example, its vets in the field must complete paper-based forms, which are scanned and manually deciphered before being …
Government response. The government has allocated £62.8 million for APHA's modernisation programme, which has a clear plan and specific milestones. This includes developing a digital customer contact form by spring 2026, a strategic licensing platform by spring 2026, in-field data capture by …
HM Treasury
5
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The Department has secured vital funding for the National Biosecurity Centre at Weybridge, but must manage significant interim risks until the redevelopment is completed in 10 years. The Weybridge facility is a critical national asset for managing threats from animal diseases but is in poor condition with ageing buildings that …
Government response. The department states it has implemented the recommendation by writing to the Committee on 18 September 2025 with the strategic plan for the Weybridge redevelopment, and committed to providing annual updates on its progress.
HM Treasury
6
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The Department’s progress delivering a multi-species livestock tracing system has been extremely slow and may not provide an integrated system for the UK. Tracing animal movements quickly—to understand where disease may have spread—is key in responding effectively to contain an outbreak. Current UK animal tracing is fragmented, with different systems …
Government response. The government agrees, committing to introduce changes to cattle identification from summer 2026, including mandatory Electronic Identification (EID) for new-born calves from 2027, and expanding coverage to other species from 2027. It also states that the Livestock Information Transformation Programme …
HM Treasury
7
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Controls at the border to prevent a new disease arriving in the UK via illegal meat imports are insufficient to the level of risk. Dover Port Health Authority (DPHA) reported a fifty-five-fold increase in the seizures of illegal meat imports from January 2023 to January 2025. The Department is not …
Government response. The government agrees, stating it has stepped up communications for travellers regarding import restrictions and is undertaking research to improve estimates of illegal meat imports, with a new methodology details to be published in early 2026. It is actively considering …
HM Treasury
8
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The Department does not have a strategy to tackle shortages in animal vaccines. Vaccines play an important role in preventative health and disease control programmes in animals, including managing antimicrobial resistance. However, there have increasingly been 5 supply shortages of animal vaccines in the past two years, affected by global …
Government response. The government agrees and commits to publishing a five-year multi-stakeholder Action Plan for securing adequate animal vaccine supply in late 2026, with Defra working with VMD on its development. It also highlights ongoing efforts like expediting a Bluetongue 3 vaccine …
HM Treasury
1
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
On the basis of a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG), we took evidence from the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (the Department) and the Animal & Plant Health Agency (APHA) on the resilience to threats from animal diseases.1
Government response. The government agrees, detailing recent cross-government exercises (Pegasus, ASPEN) in 2025 to test disease response, with reports due by March 2026. From January 2026, APHA will launch a new approach to internal preparedness assurance, embedding exercising and tiered preparedness ratings.
HM Treasury
10
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The government is planning to test its preparedness to respond to outbreaks with two major exercises during 2025. Exercise Pegasus, which is a whole-of-government exercise led by the Department of Health and Social Care alongside the Cabinet Office, will take place this autumn to test preparedness for a pandemic of …
Government response. The government agrees and will apply the lessons from Exercise Pegasus, a cross-government exercise carried out between September and October 2025, and a post-exercise report will be delivered in due course.
HM Treasury
11
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
In 2023–24, APHA’s peak vacancy rate for vets was 24% (108 full-time equivalent staff) which had fallen to 20% (99 full-time equivalent staff) in April 2025.13 In correspondence received after the evidence session the Department stated that it has a target of approximately 470 full-time equivalent vet roles within APHA …
Government response. The department is establishing a government veterinary services working group to create a workforce strategy and will consult on reform of the Veterinary Surgeon’s Act, which will include regulation for Allied Veterinary Professionals and legal protection for the title of …
HM Treasury
12
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
APHA explained that difficulties in recruiting and retaining government vets are not unique to APHA or the UK. Key factors include: mental health issues relating to activities such as culling animals; pay and conditions; and working hours. APHA set out a number of strategies it has put in place to …
Government response. The government agrees to the Committee’s recommendation and will manage vet capacity challenges through pay allowances, consider the Home Office's regulatory reform programme, establish a government veterinary services working group, and consult on reform of the Veterinary Surgeon’s Act.
HM Treasury
13
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The Department set out the work it is looking to do, with support from the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, to update the Veterinary Surgeons Act which has not been updated for a long time. Reforming the Act could allow other professionals, such as trained veterinary nurses, to do the …
Government response. The department is establishing a government veterinary services working group to create a workforce strategy and will consult on reform of the Veterinary Surgeon’s Act, which will include regulation for Allied Veterinary Professionals and legal protection for the title of …
HM Treasury
14
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Surveillance work, or ‘eyes and ears on the ground’, is vital to help detect new and re-emerging disease threats quickly and stop their spread. The Department’s and APHA’s approach to managing disease outbreaks is through a ‘surge capacity’ resourcing model, where staff switch priority from business-as-usual activities to outbreak response. …
Government response. APHA is undertaking risk-based surveillance activities and will have a clear plan with milestones within six months to track delivery of audit recommendations, including an Animal By-Product (ABP) Risk Matrix Review and a Private Veterinary Laboratory Project. By February 2027, …
HM Treasury
18
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
APHA acknowledged that its systems and processes are outdated and require modernisation. For example, its vets in the field must complete paper-based forms, which are scanned and manually deciphered before being added to a database. APHA also cited the example of having 36 different email addresses through which people can …
Government response. The government agrees to the Committee’s recommendation and outlines the Delivering Sustainable Futures (DSF) Programme, which has a £10.9 million funding provision for 2025-26 and approximately the same year on year until 2029-30, totalling £62.8 million over the six years. …
HM Treasury
19
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
APHA has established its Delivering Sustainable Futures programme as the main programme to modernise its systems and has initially started on smaller projects relating to plant health and bees. Its plant and bee inspectors in the field now have digital technology which allows them to report in real-time. APHA said …
Government response. The Delivering Sustainable Futures (DSF) Programme has a £10.9 million funding provision for 2025-26 and approximately the same year on year until 2029-30, totalling £62.8 million over the six years and will pivot to commence end- to-end services from 2026-27. …
HM Treasury
20
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
The National Biosecurity Centre at Weybridge is the UK’s primary science laboratory capability for managing threats from animal diseases. It contains 98% of APHA’s high-containment laboratories. The site is in poor condition, with ageing buildings that need major repair and replacement.24 While acknowledging the critical importance of Weybridge, the Department …
Government response. The department wrote to the Committee on 18 September 2025 setting out the programme’s strategic plan and will provide the Committee with an annual update on its progress.
HM Treasury
21
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
In 2017, the Department started a programme to redevelop Weybridge. In the 2025 Spending Review, the government committed £1 billion over the period 2025–26 to 2029–30 to continue the redevelopment, with a total estimated cost of £2.8 billion.27 In correspondence received after our evidence session, the Department stated that the …
Government response. The department will provide the Committee with an annual update on its progress redeveloping Weybridge.
HM Treasury
22
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Livestock movements in England are significant. For example, there are around 20 million movements of sheep to or from different farms, livestock markets, collection centres, and to abattoirs each year. These movements increase the risk of spreading disease. Being able to trace animal movements quickly is therefore key in responding …
Government response. The government will introduce changes to cattle identification, registration and reporting from summer 2026, including mandatory Electronic Identification (EID) for all new-born calves from 2027 and a new cattle movement reporting system. Expansion to cover additional species is planned from …
HM Treasury
24
Conclusion
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Between 2019 and March 2025, the Department has spent £181 million on the programme and some services have been developed including a new sheep, goat and deer tracing service.33 However, the Department does not expect to have a fully integrated system in place until winter 2027. It set out that …
Government response. From summer 2026, the department will introduce changes to cattle identification, registration and reporting including mandatory EID for all new-born calves from 2027. Expansion to cover additional species (sheep, goats, deer and pigs) will occur from 2027 onwards.
HM Treasury
29
Recommendation
52nd Report - Resilience to threats fro…
Accepted
Vaccines play an important role in preventative health and disease control programmes in animals, reducing disease incidence, and maintaining health and welfare. They also reduce the need for antibiotics, helping 36 C&AG’s report, para 4.13 37 Q 51 38 C&AG’s report, para 4.13 39 Q 51 40 C&AG’s report, para …
Government response. The government agrees with the recommendation and VMD will publish a five-year multi-stakeholder action plan to improve vaccine supply by late 2026; Defra will work with VMD as the plan is developed. Defra has worked with manufacturers and industry to …
HM Treasury