A pony has been killed in Egtved, Jutland, in what local authorities suspect was a wolf attack, reigniting the bitter debate over Denmark’s growing wolf population and its impact on rural communities.
The incident in Egtved, a rural area in Vejle Municipality, marks yet another chapter in Denmark’s escalating wolf problem. As reported by DR, the phrase “så er den gal igen” captures the frustration perfectly. This translates roughly to “here we go again,” and that’s exactly how it feels out here in the countryside.
I’ve watched this story unfold over the years I’ve lived in Denmark. The wolf returned to Jutland after being absent for two centuries. The first confirmed pack appeared in 2012, migrating from Germany. Now Denmark has an estimated 20 to 30 wolves roaming the peninsula.
The Growing Problem
The numbers tell the story. Over 200 documented livestock attacks occur annually now, according to Naturstyrelsen data. In 2025 alone, authorities compensated 237 livestock kills. Ponies and horses have become particular targets, with 15 attacks reported across Jutland in 2024 and 2025.
Egtved is no stranger to this. The area saw its first pony incident in July 2023. A cluster of seven attacks hit the region in October 2025. The latest suspected killing fits an unsettling pattern that has rural residents on edge.
The DNA Question
But here’s where it gets complicated. Wildlife biologists from Aarhus University have found that 80 percent of suspected wolf attacks in Jutland actually show dog involvement upon DNA analysis. Professor Cino Pertoldi has emphasized the need for forensic verification, noting that dog-wolf hybrids complicate attribution significantly.
In 2025, Naturstyrelsen data showed 65 percent of Jutland wolf kills were actually caused by dogs or hybrids. That’s a staggering misattribution rate. Yet the damage to both livestock and public trust remains real either way.
The Economic and Political Reality
The financial burden is substantial. Compensation payouts reached 12 million kroner in 2025, straining government budgets. The Animal Damage Fund covers up to 100,000 kroner per animal. Average pony losses run about 20,000 kroner, but for small farmers, that’s devastating.
The government allocated 20 million kroner in grants for deterrents in 2025. More than 150 farms installed protective measures like electric fencing and guard dogs. These work in roughly 70 percent of cases, according to conservationist data.
Two Sides, No Middle Ground
The divide is stark. Environmental groups point to biodiversity gains, including a 15 percent deer population drop in wolf areas. They cite a 2025 Voxmeter poll showing 55 percent of Danes nationally favor wolves. WWF Denmark advocates for non-lethal solutions and strict EU protections under the Habitats Directive.
Farmers see it differently. A staggering 70 percent of Jutland residents oppose wolves in local surveys. The Danish Farmers’ Union has demanded culling quotas up to 50 wolves annually. The government’s current action plan allows only 5 percent population culls, with three wolves legally killed in 2025.
Living With Uncertainty
What strikes me after years covering Denmark is how this wolf debate encapsulates broader tensions. It pits urban environmentalism against rural livelihoods. EU directives clash with local autonomy. Nature conservation battles economic reality.
The Egtved incident remains unconfirmed pending DNA results, which typically take two to four weeks. That delay itself tells you something about how Denmark handles these cases. Methodical, yes, but frustratingly slow for farmers losing animals.
The current Wolf Action Plan runs through 2026. Over 50,000 people signed anti-wolf petitions in 2025. Meanwhile, 10 illegal poaching cases were reported that same year. Trust is eroding on all sides.
For expats like me trying to understand Denmark, this issue reveals how even a small, consensus-driven society can fracture over wildlife management. The wolf isn’t just an animal here. It’s a symbol of competing visions for what Denmark should be.
Sources and References
DR: Så er den gal igen i Egtved: Nyt ponydrab formodes være ulv
The Danish Dream: Explore Nature in Denmark
The Danish Dream: Where is Jutland in Denmark
The Danish Dream: Skamlingsbanken Highest Point in Southern Jutland









