Live lobster may be off the menu

  • Chefs could be banned from boiling lobsters alive, the fisheries minister said 
  • Government is looking at a law so lobsters have to be frozen to death or stunned 
  • Campaigners want ministers to change animal welfare laws to include decapod crustaceans for the first time 

Chefs could be banned from boiling lobsters alive, the fisheries minister said yesterday.

George Eustice said the government was looking at bringing in a law that would mean the crustaceans had to be either frozen to death or stunned.

Campaigners want ministers to change animal welfare laws to include decapod crustaceans for the first time because they say there is evidence they feel pain.

Chefs could be banned from boiling lobsters alive, the fisheries minister said yesterday

Mr Eustice yesterday said the government was considering amending the legislation. He told BBC Radio 5 Live: ‘There is a serious issue. We know that among some of the larger crustaceans, such as lobsters, they do not feel conscious pain in the way that we do.

‘But there is some evidence that they have a nervous system that enables them to detect stress and this is something that we ought to be considering.

‘The RSPCA has issued some very good guidance on the correct way to kill a lobster. You can either gradually freeze them, in which case they literally lull into unconsciousness.

Campaigners want ministers to change animal welfare laws to include decapod crustaceans for the first time because they say there is evidence they feel pain

Campaigners want ministers to change animal welfare laws to include decapod crustaceans for the first time because they say there is evidence they feel pain

‘Or there is even a device called a ‘crusta-stun’, which is a stunning device that knocks a lobster out.’

He added: ‘I’ve spent many an hour sitting down with our officials and experts. We are looking at this issue but it is a complex one and the evidence is actually quite mixed.’

Campaigners including television presenter Michaela Strachan, RSPCA chief scientific officer Dr Julia Wrathall of the Humane Society International, last month wrote to Environment Secretary Michael Gove about the issue.

In a letter, they said: ‘In light of the extreme practices they are subjected to, we call on the government to include decapod crustaceans under the definition of ‘animal’ in the Animal Welfare Bill (Sentencing and Recognition of Sentience) and in the Animal Welfare Act 2006.’

More than 32,000 people have already signed a petition online to support a change in the law. 



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