Cattle gridlock: EU border delays add to coronavirus strain on meat trade
Possible slaughterhouse shutdowns and staffing issues put pressure on 'vulnerable' supply chains, as campaigners call for restriction of live exports
Campaigners have called for the suspension of all live animal shipments out of Europe, and a restriction to the shortest possible journeys within Europe, over welfare and animal diseases concerns - as meat supply chains face potentially debilitating strain.
Last week queues of up to 60km (37 miles) formed at the Polish/German border on Wednesday after Poland announced that it was shutting to foreigners. Although the closure was supposed to apply solely to people, cargo experienced a knock-on effect, with some trucks reportedly taking as long as 18 hours to get through border controls. More queues formed at the Bulgarian/Turkish border.
Sabine Fisher of German animal welfare group Animal Angels said: "One driver told us that it had taken him three hours to travel 300 metres. There were trucks of sheep, bulls, cows. I've never seen a queue like it."