ECC — European Chicken Commitment on a broiler farm
ECC is a broiler welfare standard that retailers and food-service companies commit to. It’s a market commitment, not a law. We explain what it requires and how to meet it step by step.
verifiedFrom the team that has organised work on poultry farms for years.
The European Chicken Commitment (ECC) is a set of broiler welfare requirements that retailers, producers and food-service companies across Europe voluntarily commit to. By signing the ECC, a company pledges that, by a set deadline, all the chicken it sells will come from production meeting these conditions. It’s a market commitment, not a legal obligation — its force comes from the demand of large buyers.
Must a broiler farm meet the ECC?
No law mandates the ECC. The standard becomes relevant when you sell broilers to a buyer that has signed it — then meeting the requirements is often a condition of the contract. Keep in mind that the ECC goes clearly beyond the legal minimum: a lower broiler stocking density, slower-growing breeds and environmental enrichment mean a different production model than conventional intensive rearing.
What the European Chicken Commitment requires
The ECC is a handful of hard welfare criteria, verified by an independent audit.
Maximum density of 30 kg/m²
The ECC caps maximum broiler stocking density at 30 kg/m² — well below the typical maximum in intensive rearing. Fewer birds per square metre means more space, better litter and lower stress.
Slower-growing breeds
A requirement to use breeds with a slower growth rate that meet welfare criteria (e.g. lower mortality, fewer leg problems). This is one of the hardest and most expensive parts of the ECC, because it changes the whole economics of a flock.
Natural light
Access to natural light (windows) and a lighting programme with a clear dark period. A natural day–night rhythm improves broiler welfare and activity.
Environmental enrichment
Perches and pecking objects (e.g. pecking blocks, manipulable materials) in proportion to the number of birds. Enrichment lets chickens express natural behaviours.
Controlled-atmosphere stunning
Slaughter using controlled-atmosphere stunning (CAS) instead of electrical water-bath methods. This applies to the slaughterhouse rather than the farm itself, but it is part of the whole ECC chain.
Third-party audit
Compliance with the ECC is confirmed by an independent audit — without verification a pledge has no market value. Buyers expect documented, controlled fulfilment of every criterion.
ECC step by step
- 1
Check whether your buyer requires the ECC
Start from the market: find out whether your buyer (a retailer, processor or food-service company) has signed the European Chicken Commitment and by when. If so, ask for the exact specification you must meet — the details are often spelled out in the contract.
- 2
Recalculate density to 30 kg/m²
Plan the number of chicks placed so that, at the target slaughter weight, you don’t exceed 30 kg/m². This usually means fewer birds in the house — work it out in advance, because it affects the whole flock budget.
- 3
Choose an approved, slower-growing breed
Pick a breed from the list that meets the ECC welfare criteria. Slower growth lengthens the cycle and changes feed demand — factor this into your calculations and your arrangements with the hatchery.
- 4
Adapt the house: light and enrichment
Provide access to natural light, a lighting programme with a dark period, and perches and pecking objects in the required amounts. Plan the layout so the birds actually use them.
- 5
Agree controlled-atmosphere slaughter
Confirm that the slaughterhouse your birds go to uses controlled-atmosphere stunning. This is a condition on the processor’s side, but without it the whole chain fails the ECC.
- 6
Prepare the farm for audit and keep records
Document density, breed, lighting programme, enrichment and welfare outcomes (e.g. mortality, leg condition). The independent audit checks both practice and records — solid documentation is the basis of a positive result.
Frequently asked questions about the ECC
Is the ECC legally mandatory?add
No. The European Chicken Commitment is a voluntary market pledge by companies and retailers, not a law. For a farm it only becomes relevant once a buyer that has signed the ECC requires these criteria in a contract.
How does the ECC differ from the legal minimum?add
The ECC goes well beyond the law. It caps broiler stocking density at 30 kg/m², requires slower-growing breeds, natural light and environmental enrichment, and controlled-atmosphere stunning at slaughter. It’s a higher level of broiler welfare.
Do slower-growing breeds change the economics a lot?add
Yes. Slower growth lengthens the cycle, changes feed use and, with lower density, means fewer kilograms per square metre. The ECC is designed to cost more than conventional intensive rearing — which is why it usually comes with a matching contract price from the buyer.
Who verifies ECC compliance?add
Compliance is confirmed by an independent third-party audit. A pledge alone is not enough — buyers expect documented, controlled fulfilment of every criterion for density, breed, light, enrichment and slaughter.
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