Ford shareholders reject PETA request for annual report on animal testing process

Despite a plea from Frances Cheng, a science adviser to the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) organization, Ford Motor Co. shareholders overwhelmingly voted Thursday to defeat a proposal that would have requested the automaker issue an annual report to shareholders detailing its animal testing processes.

Ford Chair Bill Ford reported that the PETA measure failed by 95%, according to preliminary vote totals received at the end of the annual virtual shareholders meeting.

The Dearborn automaker has been the focus of attention and criticism from PETA since 2021, after the activist organization discovered the automaker funded an academic study that used pigs to do crash impact analysis years earlier.

The 19-page study, published in 2018 by Wayne State University in Detroit, involved biomedical and auto safety engineers who used 27 pigs to better understand potential crash impact on small children. Data was then compared with previous, similar studies in the context of exploring orthopedic trauma and safety protocols. References in the report indicate the pigs had been euthanized before the testing began.

“The narrow scope of this research — funded nearly a decade ago and completed in 2014 — was necessarily part of developing enhanced modeling for test dummies and, in turn, improved safety of children in side-impact collisions,” company spokesperson Ian Thibodeau told the Free Press in 2021. “Ford encourages the use of non-animal alternatives for all testing whenever and wherever possible.”

Researchers in the study criticized by PETA specifically note that data used to develop crash test dummies for child safety is difficult to obtain. While various tests use human cadavers left to science, no one uses child cadavers. So engineering safety for children in vehicles is challenging. 

Pressure campaign

PETA claims that Ford needs to take a strong public position on animal testing.