Wednesday, July 8, 2015

BSE case study continues

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is still looking for cattle that were in the same herd as a cow that died in February with Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE, or mad cow’s disease).

There were 750 cattle in that birth herd and many more were in contact during feeding to market weights.

Canada’s trade status remains at “controlled risk” which means some markets won’t take some beef from Canadian packers.

The aim is to return to “negligible risk” status Canada enjoyed before the first case of BSE was identified in May, 2003. It was traced to feed that came from a rendering plant.

Canada then clamped down on the parts of beef cattle that can go into the food and feed chains.
This recent case came in the same herd that had another BSE cow death in 2010, but it also came after the clamp-down on feeding rendered materials.

The Canadian Cattlemen’s Association says about 70 per cent of the birth cohort animals – those born between 2008 and 2010 at the Alberta farm - have now been identified.


About 14 per cent of those cattle are still alive.

It's probably taking a long time for the CFIA to conduct this study because the Harper government has cut its budgets. Harper likes to talk about export opportunities for the beef sector, but fails to back it with adequate CFIA budgets.