December 24, 2025

 

Future of Scotland, UK red meat production a key issue as voters choose government next year

 

 

 

The Scottish Association of Meat Wholesalers (SAMW) has said that the future of red meat production in Scotland, the United Kingdom, will be central to the political debate as voters choose the next Scottish Government in 2026.

 

According to SAMW, red meat production will move firmly to the centre of the national political debate when voters go to the polls in 2026 against a backdrop of "repeated missed opportunities to unlock sector growth".

 

SAMW president Alan Brown said: "While there have been some positive developments over the past year, they fall well short of providing the clear, pro-growth signals that farmers and processors have consistently sought from both Holyrood and Westminster.

 

"Stability alone is not enough for an industry with the market potential we have."

 

SAMW stated that it welcomed the Scottish Government's "effective rejection" of the Climate Change Committee's targets to reduce livestock numbers.

 

Brown added: "That decision provides a welcome foundation to build livestock stability in Scotland. But stability is a baseline, not the ambition. Our industry has clear domestic and international growth opportunities, and (the) Government should be actively supporting an expansion of Scottish livestock numbers to meet that demand.

 

"Despite repeated engagement, a reluctance to back growth is not just frustrating in policy terms – it has real and damaging consequences for investment, confidence, and business viability."

 

The consequences are already being felt, said SAMW, and continued a "worrying decline" in processing capacity across the red meat sector, which saw the loss of a member business in 2025. As a result, it continued, the future of Scottish red meat production will be a major rural and economic issue in the run-up to the Scottish Parliament election that is due to take place on May 7, 2026.

 

Brown said: "This is happening despite our members generating more than £1 billion (US$1.3 billion) in annual turnover and directly employing over 3,000 people across Scotland. With the right political backing, we could be doing significantly more. Without it, the risk is a rapid and damaging contraction in jobs, throughput, and economic contribution.

 

"After spending much of 2025 in working groups formed on the basis of partnerships that delivered discussion rather than decisions, it is clear that (the) Government must now change gear and move from talk to action. We need bold leadership that backs growth, removes barriers, and modernises how (the) Government works with our sector. Only then can we unlock the additional output, jobs and turnover that are within reach."

 

Regulatory costs, particularly those linked to meat inspection, remain a significant pressure on the sector, said SAMW, although it acknowledged some limited progress during 2025.

 

Brown said: "We strongly welcome Food Standards Scotland's decision to establish a technical group, with industry involvement, to explore new approaches to ante-mortem inspection. That shows a willingness to think differently and to modernise.

 

"However, that same mindset must now be applied to inspection charges. We cannot continue to face annual increases under a system that is neither innovative nor fit for the future. Processes and procedures remain rooted in the past, which is simply incompatible with a modern, efficient, and competitive red meat sector."

 

SAMW went on to note that the strongest underlying positive is demand for red meat in the UK and globally, with Brown concluding: "Scotland produces some of the best red meat in the world. The opportunity for growth is real and immediate. What we need now is for Governments to look favourably on our sector, work with us to modernise regulation, unlock investment, and allow Scottish red meat to fulfil its full potential in 2026 and beyond."

 

- Meat Management

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