The Global Livestock Fleet report, the third in a series that has
progressively widened its scope from EU-flagged vessels to the entire global
fleet, documents 159 livestock carriers operating worldwide and presents a
portrait of a sector that, in the authors’ assessment, should alarm maritime
regulators far more than it currently does.
Of the 159 livestock carriers identified, 134 – or 84% – were merchant
ships converted from other commercial purposes, with the average converted
vessel now 45 years old, originally built as a general cargo ship and converted
for livestock transport at the age of 28. The average converted carrier has
accumulated 242 recorded deficiencies and been detained four times throughout
its operational life. The Paris Memorandum of Understanding on Port State
Control ranked livestock carriers as the worst-performing category of ships in
its latest annual report covering 2024, with 88% of inspections resulting in
deficiencies and a detention rate of 15% – almost four times the 4% average
across all inspected ship types. The fleet’s regulatory profile compounds
the concern. More than half of the 159 carriers fly flags on the Paris MoU
black list, with 54.6% of converted vessels black-listed compared with just 8%
of purpose-built carriers. Only 22.3% of converted livestock carriers are
supervised by an International Association of Classification Societies member,
against 72% of purpose-built vessels.
The conversion pipeline, far from slowing, is accelerating. Between
January 2024 and March 2026, ten older vessels were converted into livestock
carriers, compared with only three in 2022 and 2023 combined. Since 1975, at
least ten shipwrecks have been recorded in the history of sea-based livestock
transport, resulting in the deaths of 88 crew members and at least 193,000
animals. The Gulf Livestock 1, which sank off Japan in 2020 killing 41 crew and
5,867 head of livestock, remains the sector’s most devastating recent incident.