Pig World
  • News
      • Animal Health
      • Breeding
      • Business
      • Environment
      • EU
      • Food Safety
      • Housing
      • Marketing
      • NPA
      • National Pig Awards
      • New Products
      • Nutrition
      • People
      • Pig Fair
      • Politics
      • Training & Education
      • Welfare
  • Features
    • Animal Health
    • Breeding
    • Environment
    • Farm Visits
    • Herd Recording
    • Housing
    • Marketing
    • Nutrition
    • Products
    • Training
  • Comment
    • AHDB Pork
    • Chris Fogden
    • Dennis Bridgeford
    • Peter Crichton
    • Red Robin
    • Veterinary View
    • Zoe Davies, NPA
  • Numbers
  • Pig Prices
  • Magazines
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • 2025 Maximising Pig Health supplement
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • 2025 Innovation supplement
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • 2025 Buildings supplement
    • February 2025
    • 2025 Nutrition Supplement
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • 2025 National Pig Awards supplement
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • 2024 Pig Health supplement
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • 2024 Innovation supplement
    • 2024 Pig & Poultry Fair Guide
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • 2024 Buildings Supplement
    • March 2024
    • 2024 Pig Nutrition supplement
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • 2023 National Pig Awards supplement
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • Health Supplement
  • Suppliers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Manage Jobs
  • Classified
  • Events
    • Pigs Tomorrow
    • National Pig Awards
Podcast
Pig WorldPig World
  • News
      • Animal Health
      • Breeding
      • Business
      • Environment
      • EU
      • Food Safety
      • Housing
      • Marketing
      • NPA
      • National Pig Awards
      • New Products
      • Nutrition
      • People
      • Pig Fair
      • Politics
      • Training & Education
      • Welfare
  • Features
    • Animal Health
    • Breeding
    • Environment
    • Farm Visits
    • Herd Recording
    • Housing
    • Marketing
    • Nutrition
    • Products
    • Training
  • Comment
    • AHDB Pork
    • Chris Fogden
    • Dennis Bridgeford
    • Peter Crichton
    • Red Robin
    • Veterinary View
    • Zoe Davies, NPA
  • Numbers
  • Pig Prices
  • Magazines
    1. September 2025
    2. August 2025
    3. 2025 Maximising Pig Health supplement
    4. July 2025
    5. June 2025
    6. 2025 Innovation supplement
    7. May 2025
    8. April 2025
    9. March 2025
    10. 2025 Buildings supplement
    11. February 2025
    12. 2025 Nutrition Supplement
    13. January 2025
    14. December 2024
    15. November 2024
    16. 2025 National Pig Awards supplement
    17. October 2024
    18. September 2024
    19. August 2024
    20. 2024 Pig Health supplement
    21. July 2024
    22. June 2024
    23. 2024 Innovation supplement
    24. 2024 Pig & Poultry Fair Guide
    25. May 2024
    26. April 2024
    27. 2024 Buildings Supplement
    28. March 2024
    29. 2024 Pig Nutrition supplement
    30. February 2024
    31. January 2024
    32. December 2023
    33. November 2023
    34. 2023 National Pig Awards supplement
    35. October 2023
    36. September 2023
    37. Health Supplement
    Featured

    September 2025 issue of Pig World now available

    September 1, 2025
    Recent

    September 2025 issue of Pig World now available

    September 1, 2025

    August 2025 issue of Pig World now available

    August 1, 2025

    2025 Maximising Pig Health supplement now available

    August 1, 2025
  • Suppliers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Manage Jobs
  • Classified
  • Events
    • Pigs Tomorrow
    • National Pig Awards
LinkedIn X (Twitter)
Pig World
Border Controls

Border controls: ‘We are sleepwalking into a repeat of 2001’

Alistair DriverBy Alistair DriverAugust 5, 20257 Mins Read
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
DPHA’s Lucy Manzano showing Lord Trees, centre, and Danny Chambers the work the authority does in seizing illegal imports
DPHA’s Lucy Manzano showing Lord Trees, centre, and Danny Chambers the work the authority does in seizing illegal imports © Tom Haynes

Parliamentarians have expressed shock at the state of the facilities at the Port of Dover and the lack of resources available to support the teams tackling illegal meat imports there.

Members of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on UK Food Security visited the port in July and met with officials from Border Force and Dover Port Health Authority (DPHA).

During the visit, which was organised by the NPA, Liberal Democrat MPs Helen Morgan and Danny Chambers and crossbench peer Lord Trees witnessed at first hand the extremely difficult work taking place to protect the country from diseases like African swine fever (ASF) and foot-and-mouth disease (FMD).

Lucy Manzano, DPHA’s head of port health and public protection, showed them both the tourist and freight lanes, where they witnessed the procedures the teams undertake to seize illegally imported meat.

The APPG members saw various examples of where products of animal origin (POAO) had been brought into the UK illegally – not just through the personal import route, but also smuggled into commercial loads, NPA public affairs manager Tom Haynes said.

“Some of the commercial loads had this illegal POAO well hidden among legitimate consignments and were due to clear customs unchecked owing to flaws in the post-Brexit commercial imports system, the Border Target Operating Mechanism [BTOM],” he said. “Had DPHA not undertaken random spot checks on these vehicles, this illegal POAO would have entered the country.”

Danny Chambers, Lord Trees and Helen Morgan inspecting some of the day’s seizures
Danny Chambers, Lord Trees and Helen Morgan inspecting some of the day’s seizures © Tom Haynes

Front line

Dover is on the front line of this work as the UK’s biggest entry point. Since October 2022, DPHA has seized more than 243t of illegally imported product under rules introduced to protect the UK from ASF – despite limited funding and only a small percentage of vehicles being checked.

“It looks as though this year’s figure will, just over halfway through 2025, very shortly overtake the total seizure for the whole of 2024,” Mr Haynes said.

Despite the vital nature of the work it carries out, DPHA has been involved in a protracted dispute with Defra over funding for it.

After concerns the funding was going to be cut altogether, earlier this year Defra offered DPHA £3.1m for 2025-26 to deliver ‘pro-active illegal meat controls’ at Dover and Coquelles, the Channel Tunnel entry point, in France.

However, Ms Manzano recently told the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, as part of its inquiry into national biosecurity, that the funding enables less than 0.2% of vehicles arriving via Dover to be checked, with no proactive checks at all taking place 80% of the time.  It also allows no provision for checks at Coquelles, while no funding commitment has been indicated after March 2026.

“This figure is not sufficient, nor are the stipulations made by Defra, that vets and the system used to record our seizures will no longer be paid for,” Ms Manzano said.

‘Shocked by what we saw’

Lord Trees said it was fair to say all three parliamentarians were ‘shocked by what we saw’.

“DPHA, aided by Border Force, are doing all they can to check incoming vehicles for illegal imports of POAO. Faced with some 7,000 vehicles a day, offloaded at great speed – a ferry typically unloads all vehicles within seven minutes – with the resources they have, they face an impossible task.

“They only have enough staff to even potentially randomly check 20% of all the vehicles unloaded.

“In spite of the very few vehicles they do stop and check, the amount of meat and other animal products they have found and impounded has risen from a fraction of a tonne in the month of January 2023 to over 24t in January this year.

“This is but a tiny peak of an iceberg. The nature of these imports – for example, products from pigs or even wild boar – is such that they pose a huge biosecurity threat to the UK for both FMD and ASF.”

“The inspectorate at Dover is funded by DPHA, with an additional grant from Defra, which is due to expire in 2026. Basically, the DPHA is providing the biosecurity for the UK, given the pre-eminence of Dover as a port for incoming freight.

“There is a newly built border control post very close to Dover Port, at Bastion Point, some 3.2 miles away, which remains unused – this is mystifying. As it is, the facilities for inspection at the Port of Dover are in poor condition, inadequate and inappropriate for inspection of vehicles that may be carrying illegal and possibly infected meat products.”

Sleepwalking into a repeat of 2001

Mr Chambers, the MP for Winchester, said he was also ‘really shocked’ by what he and his fellow APPG members witnessed at the Port of Dover.

“Despite commendable efforts from all the DPHA and Border Force staff present, we were all really taken aback by the state of the facilities and the resources available to stop potentially disease-infected animal products entering the UK illegally.

“As a vet, the issue of biosecurity and disease is something I have repeatedly raised in parliament. Having now seen the operation at Dover, and despite repeated assurances from ministers, I fear we are sleepwalking into a repeat of 2001.

“The cost of diseases like ASF and FMD far outweigh the investment required to help protect the UK and we should be learning the lessons from other island nations like Australia and New Zealand.

“The government should implement strict biosecurity controls at our borders and provide adequate resources to agencies like DPHA and Border Force.”

Robust defences

Mr Haynes added: “Much of the produce being seized at Dover has already entered from outside the EU and then travelled the whole way across the EU before landing at UK ports.

“The recently agreed deal, and future sanitary and phytosanitary agreement with the EU is a welcome first step and will negate the need for much of the flawed BTOM implementation.

“However, it is unlikely to come into force for a number of years and does not reduce the risk posed by illegally imported POAO, especially from malign actors.

“As we transition to this new system, having robust biosecurity defences at the border must be a priority. We can’t simply rely on the EU to do this work for us.”

Following the visit, the APPG has written to Defra highlighting its concerns and calling on the department to ensure the vital work at Dover is sufficiently resourced.

Defra minister’s stance

Asked recently by MPs on the EFRA Committee about the funding offer to DPHA, Defra biosecurity minister Baroness Hayman said the department had tried to ‘pin DPHA down on what we actually need to be resourcing’.

Asked if 20% coverage at Dover was sufficient, she replied: “We would suggest that if the budget was purposed in the way we are proposing, it would be more than 20%.

“We need to focus on picking up the illegal meat, for example. A couple of times, we have asked them to refocus the budget,” she said, highlighting a dispute over whether official veterinarians (OVs) were needed at the port.

“We are currently looking at what the focus of that funding should be because we believe that some of the areas that Dover has proposed comes out of that money are not necessary – for example, veterinary fees.”

However, Ms Manzano said: “The OV skill set is unreplicated within the team, and they are critical to the successful delivery of this highly challenging and unique area of work, which includes complex identification processes of POAO and animal by-products.”

Share. LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email
Previous ArticleScale and effectiveness go hand in hand, as UPC looks to deliver for producers
Next Article Vet View: Managing heat stress in pigs
Alistair Driver

Editor Pig World, group editor Agronomist and Arable Farmer and Farm Contractor. National Pig Association webmaster. Former political editor at Farmers Guardian. Occasional media pundit. Brought up on a Leicestershire farm. Works from a shed in his Oxfordshire garden.

Read Similar Stories

‘Our objective is to keep GB safe’ – port authority and industry push for urgent border control review

September 9, 2024
Latest News

UK pig meat exports up 5.2% year-on-year in the first six months of 2025

September 12, 2025

BVA urges government to act after ‘deeply concerning’ EFRA illegal meat report

September 11, 2025

GB pig prices for week ending September 6, 2025 – SPP drops back again

September 10, 2025
Sponsored Content

Enhancing Weaned Pig Health and Performance with Zinc and Iron

August 1, 2025

THE GATEKEEPER OF RESPIRATORY HEALTH – MYCOPLASMA HYOPNEUMONIAE (M.HYO)

April 30, 2024
Current Pig Industry jobs
  • Boar Stud Assistant Manager

    • Cambridgeshire
    • Hermitage AI Ltd
  • Senior Pig Stockperson

    • Greater Manchester
    • Roadhogs Recruitment Ltd.
    • Full Time
  • Pig Stockperson – Ref 1774 Aberdeenshire

    • Aberdeenshire
    • Roadhogs Recruitment Ltd.
    • Full Time
GETTING IN TOUCH
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Meet The Editors
  • About Us
  • Email Newsletters
  • Subscribe
  • Reuse permissions
OUR SOCIAL CHANNELS
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
PARTNER EVENTS
RELATED SITES
  • Farmers Weekly
  • Agronomist & Arable Farmer
  • Farm Contractor
  • National Pig Awards
  • Pigs Tomorrow
  • Poultry News
  • Weekly Tribune
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2024 MA Agriculture Ltd, a Mark Allen Group company

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.