A new report from The Wildlife Trusts is raising questions about the accuracy of UK poultry numbers, with potential implications for the wider supply chain. The report, Counting Chickens, suggests that official government figures may be substantially underestimating the number of birds in the system.
The analysis focuses on four major poultry-producing counties – Herefordshire, Shropshire, Lincolnshire and Norfolk – and identifies wide discrepancies between different official datasets. While the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) agricultural survey records around 48 million birds across those areas, alternative data sources, including environmental permits and poultry register figures, indicate totals that are more than double that level. Even after adjusting for production cycles, such as empty sheds between crops, the report concludes that the number of birds present at any one time could still be around 50% higher than the figures used in official statistics.
According to the report, the gap is partly explained by the way poultry data is collected. The Defra survey captures a single snapshot in June each year, meaning that sheds standing empty between flocks are not counted, while its sampling approach may miss some producers or rely heavily on company-level data. Other datasets, such as those compiled by the Environment Agency and the Animal and Plant Health Agency, measure different aspects of the sector, including permitted capacity and registered flocks, rather than actual occupancy on a given day. The result is that, unlike cattle or sheep, there is no single, consistent figure for poultry numbers in the UK, and each dataset tells a slightly different story.
The report argues that if bird numbers are higher than currently recorded, then associated impacts such as manure production, ammonia emissions and nutrient loading may also be underestimated. That in turn could influence how environmental regulations are applied, particularly in areas where poultry production is concentrated and where water quality is already under scrutiny. For producers, this raises the prospect of tighter permitting requirements, increased focus on nutrient management and greater attention to how poultry operations fit within catchment-based environmental targets.
The report suggests there may already be more capacity in the system than the official figures imply, depending on which dataset is used. That could complicate discussions around planning applications and expansion, particularly in regions where local authorities are already taking a cautious approach to new poultry units.
The report calls for a full review of how poultry data is collected and used.
Defra, NFU and BPC have all been contacted for comment.
