Sat. Apr 18th, 2026

Elephants in Zoos Have Been Let Down


Reading Time: 4 minutes

Quick summary: Evidence shows elephants in UK zoos face persistent welfare problems including limited space, small social groups, and high mortality, raising serious ethical concerns. Current policy allows continued captivity despite these issues, with slow timelines for enclosure improvements that may not meet elephants’ complex needs. Stronger standards and ethical scrutiny are needed to protect well-being and inform future decisions on whether elephants should remain in zoos.




Issues for zoo-housed elephants include limited space, inadequate social groupings, reduced survivorship, and health problems such as foot and joint disorders and obesity. Currently, there are over 500 elephants in over 140 zoos across 31 European countries, including 49 elephants across 10 zoos in the UK. 

Concern for elephant welfare in UK zoos resulted in the establishment of the Elephant Welfare Group (EWG), which, in 2021, presented a report to the Zoos Expert Committee (ZEC) who are responsible for advising the UK government on matters relating to zoos. The findings of the EWG report are understood to have been considered during the creation of revised zoo standards for Great Britain, including whether the keeping of elephants in zoos should be phased out. 

Following written and verbal stakeholder consultations, the ZEC concluded, “ZEC and the majority of the consultees feel at this stage there is not enough evidence presented in the Report to recommend the phasing out of elephant keeping in the UK”.

Despite this recommendation, significant concerns persist for the welfare of elephants kept in UK zoos when the findings of the EWG report are compared to previous findings from the 2000s.

Elephants are not suited to living in zoos

Elephants are intelligent, highly social, and emotional beings, who form lifelong family bonds and mourn their dead. They navigate vast landscapes, remember watering holes from decades previously, and even show empathy toward other species. Related elephants live in a layered society of families which may come together and break apart in a process known as “fission-fusion”. In 2008, the mean group size of elephants in UK zoos was 4.1. By the end of the EWG study period in 2019, the mean group size was 4.3. This contrasts with median herd sizes in the wild of 9 to 16 for African savanna elephants (Loxodonta africana) and 7 to 10 for Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). As of October 2025, it is estimated that there are 21 elephants across Europe, including two elephants in UK zoos, that are kept in solitary conditions with no social contact with any other elephants.

Elephants range over vast distances, with home ranges of thousands of square kilometres being reported for African savanna elephants and hundreds of square kilometres for Asian elephants. The average enclosure size for elephants in UK zoos was reported to be 18,266m2 (0.018km2). Seven of the eleven zoos that held elephants during the period of the EWG’s 10-year study had enclosures smaller than the reported average. For perspective, of the ten zoos currently keeping elephants within the UK, eight have an enclosure which is smaller than their visitor car park. The EWG report identified that space in zoos “remains too small and too unvaried” for elephants to exhibit a full range of natural movements and behaviours. 

Additionally, the report highlights that premature mortality and shortened lifespans remain “major problems” with those animals born into captivity suffering from an “atypically short lifespan”. As found in 2008, the first-year mortality of zoo-born elephants remains three times higher than that observed in the wild. Mortality in captive born elephants under the age of five is approximately 40%, largely due to captive born elephants being far more susceptible to a haemorrhagic disease which predominantly afflicts juvenile Asian elephants following the activation of Elephant Endotheliotropic Herpes Virus (EEHV), which has co-evolved alongside elephants throughout their evolutionary history. Overall, the median lifespan of captive born individuals was found to be approximately 20 years and no elephants currently kept in zoos across Europe have reached the maximum ages seen in free-living elephants (75–80 years).

The report could have been better

When the findings of the EWG report are considered in the context of the ZEC’s recommendation to continue keeping elephants in UK zoos, it highlights that from the outset of the EWG study, there was no clear ethical framework to identify what constituted ‘improvement’. Perhaps more importantly, no attempt was made to establish the level of improvement necessary in order to determine that the welfare needs of elephants were being sufficiently met and to justify their continued captivity. Additionally, it failed to emphasise the unsuitable climate that exists in the UK for elephants and the impact it can have on elephant health, and on the functional space elephants have available to them, particularly in the winter given that only 50% of UK zoos provided their elephants with 24/7 access to their outdoor enclosures.

Furthermore, the report only focused on one aspect of keeping elephants in zoos: welfare. It did not cover the ethics of elephant keeping, or the debate over the claimed conservation, education or research roles of those elephants. Nor did it fully consider the psychological welfare of elephants outside of behavioural indicators. This is despite these aspects being fundamental to developing a rounded and informed response to the question of whether elephants should continue to be kept in zoos. The report highlights that in future, it will be critical to determine if “elephants can be provided with a ‘good life’, taking full consideration of their psychological welfare”.

We must do better

For now, the keeping of elephants in UK zoos looks set to continue. With the publication of the revised zoo standards for Great Britain, zoos keeping elephants must increase their enclosures to a minimum of 20,000m2 which is still 700 times smaller than the smallest reported home range for wild elephants. Only three UK zoos currently meet this minimum requirement. Concerningly, zoos have been given 15 years to improve the space provided to their elephants, with a deadline of 2040. This means that there are elephants in UK zoos who could live in enclosures for another 15 years which have been deemed too small by the UK government.

Recommendations by the ZEC in response to the EWG report included establishing a formal process to examine the ethical complexities of keeping elephants in captivity, so that future decisions (whether continuation or phase-out) are informed by both scientific evidence and ethical debate.

It is only when we take a holistic approach to this issue that informed and rounded discussions can truly take place, and we can move towards a future where the betterment of individual elephants is at the forefront of policy decisions.

***

This topic was first presented by Chris Lewis, captivity research & policy manager, Born Free Foundation, at Annual Oxford Animal Ethics Summer School. The Summer School is organised by the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics, an independent centre pioneering ethical perspectives on animals through academic research, teaching, and publication. The Centre comprises more than 100 academic Fellows worldwide and hosts the annual Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics Summer School, now in its tenth year. The Revd Professor Andrew Linzey, director of the Centre is the subject of a new documentary called ‘The Animal Thing’.

Related Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *