Britain’s 2.64m animal tests

Meagre decrease in Britain’s animal testing highlights urgent need for the government’s phase-out strategy
Katie Hill - Editor-in-Chief, My Green Pod
Researcher holds experimental white rabbit

Cruelty Free International acknowledges the slight decrease in animal testing in Great Britain, as reported by the Home Office, but warns that the pace of change remains so painfully slow that cruel animal testing looks set to continue for decades to come.
 
There were 2,637,578 uses of animals in laboratories in Great Britain in 2024. This incremental progress, a meagre 2% decrease from 2023, is not enough to meet public expectations or scientific potential, and leaves the government at risk of falling short in its manifesto commitment to work to phase out animal testing.

Animal testing numbers

The number of animals used in experimental procedures fell by 3% in 2024, to 1.43 million.

There was virtually no change in the creation and breeding of genetically altered animals – those whose genes have been modified but have not then been used in further tests. This accounted for 54% of all uses (1,430,020). 
 
Animals used in regulatory testing, including the standardised tests designed to assess the safety or effectiveness of chemicals, medicines and other products and routine production, using animals to produce things like antibodies, accounted for 22% of the total (315,290), a 3% increase on 2023.

‘With 2.64 million uses of animals in British laboratories in 2024, the rate of decline remains painfully slow. We hope that the government’s commitment on a strategy for the phase-out of animal testing in Great Britain means that this is one of the last years where the use of animals is anywhere near this level.

‘The general public are ready for animal testing to end, and science is ready to make the transition – now there must be action to ensure that animal testing does not continue for decades to come.’

DR EMMA GRANGE
Cruelty Free International’s Director of Science and Regulatory Affairs
 

Reasons for testing

Basic research – curiosity-driven research that attempts to shed light on biological processes – accounted for 52% of the total number of animals used in experiments (741,555), a 4% decrease on last year.

Translational research – research that attempts to develop treatments or cures for diseases – 24% (339,673, an 8% decrease) and other areas of animal use, including higher education, species preservation and protection of the environment , 2% (33,502, an increase of 36% on 2023). 
 
Of the 2.64 million uses of animals in 2024, 18.5% were considered by researchers to have caused moderate or severe pain and suffering to the animals involved, including long-term disease and even death.

These two categories involved a total of 488,255 animals.

Rise in cat & horse testing

The total number of experiments on dogs fell by 30% to 2,646.

There was an 11% decrease in experiments on monkeys (to 1,936), a 31% decrease in the use of rabbits (to 6,195) and a 28% decrease in the use of guinea pigs (to 2,698).

However, there was a 30% increase in experiments on cats (to 82) and a 1% rise in the use of horses (to 11,483). 
 
Mice and rats continued to be the most frequently used animals in scientific procedures, with 1,869,064 mice and 150,221 rats used in 2024.

Avoidable tests

The statistics also show that, despite progress in some areas, the full elimination of increasingly outdated tests is yet to be achieved and, in fact, an increase for some tests has been observed for 2024.

Cruelty Free International’s Replace Animal Tests (RAT) List describes animal tests that are conducted in Britain despite having approved non-animal replacements and whose abolition could save over 80,000 animals every year.

This list includes the batch-potency testing of Botox on mice, which rose by 5% to 52,213 in 2024.

The number of eye irritation and corrosion tests fell to three, from seven in 2023; skin sensitisation tests on mice decreased by 50% to 148 and skin irritation and corrosion fell to zero from three in 2023.
 
The number of uses of animals in the testing of chemicals, including ingredients used in everyday consumer products, rose by 33% in 2024 (to 59,814).

Other sectors that used animals included the testing of human medicines (148,694), veterinary medicines (84,046), plant protection products, such as pesticides (11,756) and tests for food production (9,971).

There were no animals used in the testing of ingredients exclusively used in cosmetics products in 2024.

‘We need bold, forward-thinking policies which can begin to free us from the use of outdated experiments on animals, to the benefit of all, including the animals used in tests. The focus must now be on plans to end animal testing and the transition to exclusive use of non-animal approaches, some of which have already been shown to perform at least as well, or better, than tests on animals.

‘The government must make good on its promise to partner with scientists, industry and civil society to proactively contribute to the progression away from animal testing. Any cruel animal test is one too many and we will continue to fight for zero animal experiments in Great Britain.’

DR EMMA GRANGE
Cruelty Free International’s Director of Science and Regulatory Affairs

A new policy

Cruelty Free International has reiterated its call for the government to publish a bold, ambitious and deliverable strategy to phase out animal testing, and to ensure it has a clear vision for ending tests on animals in this country.

The charity wants to see a concrete strategy, with specific targets and timelines, that is action oriented, delivering tangible policy measures and regulatory reform.

The strategy should be led from the top, with ministerial accountability and departmental coordination through a cross-government taskforce, and should take a collaborative approach, engaging civil society, NGOs, academia and industry to boost innovation and reduce the number of tests on animals.

Existing protections should be protected and the strategy should build on initiatives already underway both inside and outside of government.

Long-term funding must be made available for education and training, replacement-focused research to meet evolving regulatory needs and investment in the further development of centres of excellence.

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