Closed petition Retain bans on cat, dog, seal fur imports, and extend to ban all fur imports

The Government must commit to keep vital bans on imports of cat, dog and seal furs, and extend legislation to ban the import and sale of fur from all species. The UK banned fur farming because it is so cruel, we must stop importing that same cruelty.

More details

In 2003 fur farming was banned in the UK. Through EU laws, trade in cat, dog and seal fur has also been banned. Powers in the Retained EU Law Bill mean Government could repeal existing fur trade bans, when it should be extending them to all animals. It is estimated that the UK imports fur from millions of animals annually, but a 2022 poll shows 77% of Brits believe Government should ban fur imports.

This petition is closed All petitions run for 6 months

69,946 signatures

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100,000

Government responded

This response was given on 27 March 2023

There are already bans in place which the Government will retain. We have no plans currently to make further changes.

The Government shares the public's high regard for animal welfare.  Our commitment to improve animal welfare standards is set out in the Action Plan for Animal Welfare.   

Farming animals for their fur been banned in England and Wales since 2000, and since 2002 in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

There are restrictions on some skin and fur products which cannot be legally imported into the UK. These include fur and fur products from cats and dogs, and a ban on commercially importing and marketing all seal products and any related products with limited exemptions. We have also established controls on fur from endangered species protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species and we do not allow imports of fur from certain wild animals caught using methods which are non-compliant with international humane trapping standards.

The Government is in the process of analysing all retained EU law. This analysis will enable us to determine what should be preserved as part of domestic law and what should be repealed or amended. Current Government policy is to retain existing fur measures. While Defra published a formal call for evidence on the fur trade in Great Britain in 2021, we have no plans currently to make further changes.

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Overdue Government response to petition chased by MPs

The Petitions Committee, the group of MPs who consider parliamentary petitions, has written to the Secretary of State for Environment Food and Rural Affairs, Thérèse Coffey MP, about the overdue Government response to this petition.

In the letter, the Chair of the Petitions Committee Catherine McKinnell MP asks the Government to provide a response to the petition and an explanation for the delay responding by Thursday 13 April.

Government departments are meant to submit responses to petitions within 21 days. A response to this petition was first requested by the Committee on 26 January 2023, but the Government has not yet responded.

Because the response to this petition is now several weeks overdue, the Committee has written to the Government asking them to explain the delay, and to provide their response to this petition.

In the letter, Catherine McKinnell MP highlights how important it is that Government departments provide a timely response to e-petitions that receive over 10,000 signatures.

We will share the Government's explanation for the delay, and their response, with you when we receive this.

Government Minister explains delay in responding to the petition you signed

The Minister for Biosecurity, Marine and Rural Affairs, Lord Benyon, has responded to the Petitions Committee's request for an explanation for the delay in responding to the petition you signed.

The Minister said:

"In recent months, Defra has been responding to a large volume of e-petitions, as well as a backlog of correspondence. The Department continues to review its processes and endeavours to provide on-time responses to e-petitions in the future."

Import and sale of fur debated by MPs

On Tuesday 27 June, Giles Watling MP led a Westminster Hall debate in Parliament on the import and sale of fur.

Watch the debate, read the transcript of what was said, and access other relevant material:

What are Westminster Hall debates?

Westminster Hall is the second Chamber of the House of Commons.

Westminster Hall debates give MPs an opportunity to raise local or national issues and receive a response from a government minister. Any MP can take part in a Westminster Hall debate.

The topic for this debate was nominated by the Backbench Business Committee. The Committee give backbenchers (MPs who aren’t ministers or shadow ministers) an opportunity to secure a debate on a topic of their choice, either in the main House of Commons Chamber or Westminster Hall.

The debate took place on a ‘general debate' motion expressed in neutral terms. These motions are worded ‘That this House has considered [a specific matter]'. This means that the debate doesn’t end in a vote on a particular action or decision.

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