Thank you for signing!
Stop the Torture of Animals in Australian Labs Now
Final signature count: 15,099
15,099 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Hundreds of thousands of animals are suffering in secret across Australia—demand action now to stop the pain, expose the truth, and protect those who cannot fight back.
Each year in Australia, more than 845,000 animals are used in scientific research, many in experiments that cause severe pain, long-term distress, or lasting harm.1 These animals—dogs, mice, pigs, rabbits, monkeys, and others—live and die inside laboratories, often unseen by the public and largely unprotected by meaningful oversight.
What happens to them is not rare or accidental. It is routine. And it is happening under a national code that lacks strong enforcement, independent monitoring, and clear limits on suffering.
A System That Relies on Trust, Not Accountability
Australia does not have a single, transparent national system that tracks how animals are used in research.2 Reporting varies by state. Some data is incomplete. Some is never made public. In many cases, animals bred for experiments are not counted at all.
Ethical decisions are often left to internal committees within the same institutions conducting the research. According to investigations by The Guardian, inspections are infrequent and usually triggered only after complaints are made.1 This leaves countless animals vulnerable to prolonged suffering without meaningful external scrutiny.
Painful Practices Continue Despite Available Alternatives
Animals in Australian labs are subjected to invasive surgery, toxic exposure, forced stress tests, and deliberate infection.3 Some endure repeated procedures over months or years. Others are euthanised after experiments end.
At the same time, non‑animal research methods—such as human cell testing and computer-based models—continue to advance. Yet they remain underused and underfunded, while harmful animal experiments persist by default rather than necessity.4
The Public Expects Better
Surveys show that Australians support research only when it is humane, necessary, and transparent.5 That expectation is not being met. Compassion is not a radical demand. It is a basic ethical standard.
Animals used in research are sentient beings. They feel fear. They feel pain. A system that allows unnecessary suffering without firm safeguards fails both animals and the public.
Now Is the Time to Act
We are calling on the National Health and Medical Research Council to immediately review and update its code governing animal research. This review must include enforceable standards, independent monitoring, and clear bans on practices that cause unnecessary suffering.
Change will not happen quietly or automatically. It requires public pressure. Add your name. Demand accountability. Help push Australia toward a research system grounded in humanity, responsibility, and respect for life.
Sign the petition today.
The Petition
Recent Signatures
- Stephanie Cole
- Cornelia Czornei Palladini
- Kristin Albers
- Anonymous
- Marlene Phelan
- Lynn Griffith
- Anonymous
- Anonymous
- Laura Zimmerman
- Dina Razon
- Marcia Hurley
- Bassam Imam
- Anonymous
- Deloris Rainey
- Tom S
- Dmit lan
- Lisa Whipple
- Sandra Ainsley
- Tim Oseckas
- Jessica Taliaferro
- nerea herrero
- Kim Gates
- P Teso
- Marilyn Higgins
- Tonia Wallner
- Chrystelle Rondin c
- Deborah moos
- Andrea Whitehead
- Eli Rhodes
- Bessie Hurt
- Ashlee Davis
- Susan Miller
- Nikki Heikke-Evans
- Diana LaGrow
- SARA TABAK
- Molly Yares
- Andrea Smith
- Nancy Gallagher
- Daniela Bodmann
- Joyce Wright
- Rhoda Gutierrez
- Irina Zasypkina
- Kerry Lea Noriega
- Anonymous
- Tara Knopp
- Wanda Woodworth
- Wendy Parker
- Melisa Basi
- Christine Hesselbarth
- Lubna Abdullah
- Lauri Moon
- Tracy Schuermann
- Judy Kopf
- Ed McElroy
- Nancy Taylor
- Maria Tucker
- carla sieuw
- Nicole de Manincor
- Sue Shell
- Margaret Thomas
- Teresa Mucherino
- Karen Gardner
- Candice Santora
- Esmeralda Leon
- ANDROULLA FOURCAULT
- Sarah Olley
- LK Scott
- IRISH CARLISLE
- Joseph De Maria
- Anonymous
- Alisa Jarski
- Kimberly Wiley
- Arihel Bermudez
- Christian Genitrini
- Sherry Sturges
- Maria Wallsten
- Marla Feldhacker
- Anonymous
- Anonymous
- Alicia Keller
- Rae Burgess
- Shannon Diamond
- Carol Meade
- Anuja Bhatt
- Susan Civitano
- Klaske Bootsma
- Emily Borrows
- Cartman Barraca
- C Mittelstead
- Susannah Knottley
- Anonymous
- Alexa Cholankeril
- Sandra Bryan
- Brenda Rosalez
- Daniel Partlow
- Gregory Renna
- Jacquie Hicks
- Ina Vonk
- Anonymous
- Sheila Wathke
