Home

Probe as 'checked and healthy' sheep die in air export

Liv CasbenAAP
Authorities are investigating the deaths of 80 sheep sent to Indonesia by air. (Steven Saphore/AAP PHOTOS)
Camera IconAuthorities are investigating the deaths of 80 sheep sent to Indonesia by air. (Steven Saphore/AAP PHOTOS) Credit: AAP

Investigations are continuing into how 80 sheep died while being transported by air to Indonesia.

The Australian Livestock Exporters Council said the breeder sheep deaths happened on Saturday evening after the animals, which departed from Sydney on a plane, had been checked and deemed healthy.

The department of agriculture, as the regulator of live animal exports, is investigating.

"It is premature to comment on the incident or speculate as to possible cause at this time," a department spokesperson said.

The sheep which were Dorpers, were headed to Jakarta.

According to government data 11 sheep have died while being exported by air between 2019 and 2023, with 132,499 sheep exported by plane during that period.

The council, LiveAir, the exporter and the air freight operator will work with the regulator as the investigation progresses.

The RSPCA has long campaigned against live exports by sea and says the industry is "unfixable".

"We expect the exporter, and the government as the regulator, to be open and transparent with the Australian community about what happened, what went wrong, and what steps will be taken to prevent this happening with any more Australian sheep in the future," a spokesperson for the RSPCA said.

Live sheep exports by sea will be banned from May 2028 after legislation passed the Senate in July, but air exports can continue.

Labor vowed to end the trade by sea following animal rights concerns after thousands of sheep died of heat stress while en route to the Middle East.

The federal government has slated a $107 million transition package to flow to affected farmers.

Last-minute lobbying by West Australian farmers and exporters was not enough to have the legislation blocked.

Farmers have warned that some WA towns will die once the law comes into force and vowed to target Labor's marginal seats.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails