Conor O'Gorman
Well-Known Member
Thanks, as you allude to, market forces have been influencing a move away from lead ammunition for many years for both small and large game, particularly the latter, as seen on this deer stalking forum.Fair question.
We are attempting to market game as a sustainable alternative to farmed meat products, but we are reluctant to accept that if we want to market it as green and clean we need to lose the lead, and sooner rather than later.
The evidence at the moment suggests that the majority of shoots and shooters are still using lead, which just may indicate that the “ voluntary transition “ is not working.
So I m not aiming at BASC specifically, but I am pointing out that the video you posted is not totally inaccurate.
Lead is being placed in the food chain unnecessarily because large commercial shoots have not banned it.
They have banned plastic wads, but they refuse to ban lead probably because it means the end of extreme birds and high peg prices.
So no, my comment is not aimed at all of you, just those of you who think that it’s acceptable to put food containing heavy metal into the food chain and claim that it’s safe, green and sustainable.
As has been discussed before on this forum, and argued in BASC responses to the HSE consultations, the relationship between lead in game meat and clinical effects in humans is not conclusive.
Also in the mix we have people and orgs campaigning for a ban on lead ammunition via scaremongering about lead levels in game meat because they perceive this as a more persuasive means of gathering support to their cause than the impacts on birds from the use of lead shot. The WWT video in the OP with one customer collapsing dead over their meal is an extreme example of this - there are no cases of people dying from lead poisoning from eating game meat.
There was another WWT video in January with emotive footage of babies and puppies.
For at least a decade there have been images used in 'ban lead ammo' campaigns illustrating lead pathways from lead ammunition involving toddlers and pregnant women.
It's a complex issue with many nuances, as you know, and perhaps at two extremes we have some shooting folk that believe there is no negative impact from lead shot ingestion by birds and its all a conspiracy to ban shooting, and some other folk that believe that there is no impact on shooting by banning all uses of lead ammunition and they seek a one size fits all solution regardless of the evidence.