The adopted legislation also clarifies the division of responsibilities between animal keepers, traders, veterinarians, and national authorities and puts in place better notification and surveillance tools to fight animal diseases. This in turn should lead to fewer epidemics in EU countries, and help them reduce their social and economic effects thus ensuring the competitiveness and safety of EU livestock production.
The new legislation also recognises the importance of recent emerging issues, such as antimicrobial resistance, and sets out a better legal basis for monitoring animal pathogens which are resistant to antimicrobial agents. This will be supplemented by two further proposals - on veterinary medicines and on medicated feed - currently being negotiated in the European Parliament and Council. I would like to thank both the European Parliament and the Council. Today's agreement will allow us to improve our handling of animal disease outbreaks, thus ensuring that the economic impacts of disease on our agriculture are lessened to the greatest extent possible, and that we protect growth and jobs in a sector which is key also to EU food safety and food security."
For the full text of the proposal and detailed Q&As see here.