In 2019, a major step forward has been taken by the UN Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR) meaningfully called “The Future is Now”, prepared by an Independent Group of Scientists appointed by the United Nations Secretary-General.
The 2019 Global Sustainable Development Report (GSDR)
For the first time, the GSDR acknowledged that animal welfare is a key issue missing in the 2030 Agenda (See Jessica Bridgers, “Just in Time for World Animal Day, UN Global Sustainable Development Report Identifies Animal Welfare as Issue Missing from the Sustainable Development Agenda, World Animal Net”, 4 October 2019). It states at art. 117:
“The clear link between human health and well-being and animal welfare is increasingly being recognized in ethics- and rights-based frameworks. Strong governance should safeguard the well-being of both wildlife and domesticated animals with rules on animal welfare embedded in transnational trade”.
To fully recognize all aspects of sustainable development (human, environmental, and animal concerns), a new SDG 18 on “animal health, welfare, and rights” has been proposed (see Ingrid J. Visseren-Hamakers, “The 18th Sustainable Development Goal”, 3 Earth System Governance 1–5, 2020. The Animal Issues Thematic Cluster (AITC), as part of the NGOs Major Group at the UN, aims at “Ensuring that the care, protection, and conservation of animals is included in the sustainable development agenda”. In its 2019 report for the UN High-Level Political Forum, the AITC highlighted the ways that animal protection helps to support most of the SDGs and how this protection would foster SDGs’ achievement.
After the GSDR release in 2019, the UN Secretary-General confirmed this consideration for animal welfare in its report on Harmony with Nature in 2020.
The 2020 UN Secretary-General Report on Harmony with Nature
In the art. 42 of its 2020 report on Harmony with Nature, the UN Secretary-General stated:
“A first step to recognizing the rights of Nature is the recognition that non-human animals are sentient beings, not mere property, and must be afforded respect and legal recognition. Such recognition is growing around the world, in particular with regard to those animals best known and most easily appreciated by humans”.
Indeed, animals are sentient beings, and their welfare should be better protected globally (See Sabine Brels, Le droit du bien-être animal dans le monde : évolution et universalisation, l’Harmattan, 2017). An increasing number of countries have done so in their laws, their civil codes (See the Animal Welfare Legislation Database at National Level by Sabine Brels for the Global Animal Law – GAL Association), and the European Union in the Lisbon Treaty affirms in art. 13 that “States shall, since animals are sentient beings, pay full regard to the welfare requirements of animals”.
Under the aegis of the African Union, the Animal Welfare Strategy in Africa mission is aiming at “treating animals as sentient beings”.
It is also important to highlight here that, internationally, all the 182 members of the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) have agreed to implement the growing series of various international standards on animal welfare since early 2000.
The Growing Recognition of the Need to consider Animal Welfare by UNEP
As a matter of fact, the intensification of animal density-both of farmed animals (in factory farms) and wild animals (because of habitat loss) drives the spread of zoonoses, such as H1N1 from farmed animals and Covid-19, which likely came from wild animals. As stated by UNEP in its 2020 report for Preventing the next pandemic: “These diseases affect not only human health but also animal health and welfare” and identifies the growing need for “ensuring animal welfare” (see pages 72 and 41).
The next year in its 2021 report Making Peace with Nature, UNEP also recalls the need to “improve animal welfare’ for ‘sustainable agricultural systems” (see pages 34 and 121).