Collection: Animal diseases: international and UK monitoring

Updated: Added the preliminary outbreak assessment for African swine fever in wild boar in Belgium.

We monitor any major, notifiable or new and emerging animal disease outbreaks worldwide. We do this as an early warning to assess the risk they may pose to the UK, in particular those diseases which impact on animal health and welfare, international trade, public health or wider society.

We assess the risk that diseases might come into the UK through trade in animals or animal products (legal or illegal), through movement of wildlife, or through movement of things such as insects which may carry a disease. We use these outbreak assessments to help us decide how to manage or reduce the risks.

We carry out a full qualitative risk assessment in certain cases, and in response to specific policy questions concerning a disease outbreak. This is based on the general principles of the OIE qualitative risk analysis framework.




Research and analysis: African swine fever in pigs in Central and Eastern Europe

Updated: Added update 17 (31 August 2018).

Preliminary outbreak assessments and updated situation assessments for African swine fever in Central and Eastern Europe.




Detailed guide: GM Inspectorate: deliberate release inspection programme

Updated: Reports from 1 April 2018 – 31 March 2019 added.

Consent to release a GMO is issued by the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs under the GMO (Deliberate Release) Regulations 2002 (as amended).

Specific consents are issued with strict conditions for conducting and managing each release. It is the GM Inspectorate’s responsibility to ensure that consent holders are complying with these conditions by undertaking inspections of GM deliberate release field sites for both experimental (‘Part B’) and commercial (‘Part C’) consents.

See further information on GMOs and regulations.

In ‘Part B’ consents, conditions such as correct location and size of GM release, separation distances from other crops, presence and size of pollen barriers, control of volunteers and flowering plants, and monitoring requirements, may be imposed. GM Inspectors must verify that the release is compliant with these conditions, if this is found not to be the case the consent holder will be contacted and the matter investigated further.

Deliberate release reports

A Part B deliberate release inspection report includes the following:

  • consent reference – the unique reference number designated by Defra
  • name of the consent holder – the body which has been granted the consent
  • release details – specifying the type of genetic modification (for example, herbicide tolerance)
  • site number – site details, giving the location of the release site, including 6-figure Ordnance Survey grid reference
  • type of crop grown at the release site
  • site inspection date
  • site inspection number – showing how many inspections have been carried out at the site during that year
  • staff seen – showing the title of the personnel who provided the information to the Inspector
  • ‘inspection details’ summarises the findings of the inspection
  • ‘report conclusions’ identifies whether or not the consent conditions have been complied with and identifies any risks to human health or the environment
  • ‘action taken’ highlights any activities carried out by the inspector in relation to the consent conditions

Experimental ‘Part B’ releases

Field inspection reports

Reports on field inspection visits are produced and submitted to Defra within an agreed framework of 5 working days. The consent holder and Defra have 20 days in which to comment on the factual details of the report before the reports are placed on the public register and published.

Reports from 1 April 2018 – 31 March 2019

Reports from 1 April 2017 – 31 March 2018

Reports from 1 April 2016 – 31 March 2017

Reports from 1 April 2015 – 31 March 2016

Previous reports are available on the archived GM Inspectorate website.

Commercial ‘Part C’ releases

There are currently no commercial releases of GM crops in the UK.




Notice: Current catch limits: over 10 metre non-sector pool

Updated: Figures updated

Your catch limits are in your vessel licence annexe – Category A, Category A – Islands, Category B and Category C and can be varied through the year. Your fishing vessel licence annex will also list the stocks that you cannot keep on board or land.

On this page, you can view archived catch limits for the current year to date, and previous years.




Notice: Current catch limits: 10 metres and under pool

Updated: Quota updated

Your catch limits are in your vessel licence annexe and can be varied through the year. Your fishing vessel licence annex will also list the stocks that you cannot keep on board or land.

On this page, you can view archived catch limits for the current year to date, and previous years.