
Strengthening disease surveillance in equestrian sport
Biosecurity
Equipass Team
Feb 19, 2026
International equestrian sport relies on frequent horse travel between countries and competitions. This mobility increases the risk of infectious disease spread when detection, reporting and traceability systems are not fully aligned. Equipass, a digital equine passport and identity platform, could strengthen equine disease surveillance, biosecurity monitoring and outbreak response coordination across the global competition circuit.
Mobility and infectious disease risk
High-density stabling, shared equipment and international transport create conditions where equine infectious diseases such as Equine Herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) can spread quickly. Delays in recognising clinical signs or tracing exposed horses often complicate outbreak management once horses have travelled internationally.
Lessons from FEI EHV-1 outbreaks
The 2021 Valencia outbreak demonstrated how rapidly EHV-1 can impact multiple countries. Emergency actions included competition suspensions, movement restrictions and blocking exposed horses in the FEI database.
Post-event reviews identified key weaknesses:
- delayed reporting of febrile horses
- limited isolation and contingency planning
- inconsistent temperature monitoring
- fragmented data sharing between stakeholders
These gaps showed that real-time equine health data and faster information exchange are critical for effective disease management.

WOAH principles: surveillance and traceability
Global animal-health frameworks emphasise three pillars:
- early disease notification
- centralised surveillance systems
- accurate animal movement traceability
These principles align with the core purpose of Equipass as a digital equine passport system supporting biosecurity and disease tracking.
How Equipass could improve disease tracking

Centralised equine health records
A unified digital record would allow veterinarians and officials to review vaccination status, temperature logs and clinical history in one place. This supports quicker identification of health risks and earlier precautionary action.
Enhanced traceability of horse movements
A single digital identity linked to travel history could improve contact tracing during outbreaks. Authorities could rapidly identify exposed horses and apply targeted movement controls based on verified data.
Faster biosecurity communication
Equipass could streamline communication by sending real-time alerts, sharing updated biosecurity protocols and providing verified health status information to organisers, athletes and veterinarians.
Long-term insights
Using aggregated, anonymised data, Equipass could help spot disease trends over time, highlight seasonal risks and show common travel routes in international equestrian sport.

Past EHV-1 outbreaks in international competition circuits highlighted the need for faster reporting, stronger traceability and clearer stakeholder communication. By centralising health data and supporting coordinated outbreak response, Equipass could enhance how the equestrian sector monitors and manages infectious disease risks, improving situational awareness and response efficiency across borders.
Media:
© FEI/Leanjo de Koster
© FEI/Christophe TANIERE
Courtesy of FEI
© FEI/Leanjo de Koster
© FEI/Christophe TANIERE
Courtesy of FEI

