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Test EVERY Cow in the Food Chain

Test EVERY Cow in the Food Chain
Like Other Countries Do

Saturday, February 28, 2009

'The Cow Is a Climate Bomb'



By Michaela Schiessl and Christian Schwägerl

Whether cattle are reared organically or with conventional farming methods, the end effect is bad for the environment, according to a new German consumer report. The agricultural lobby, however, is preventing politicians from tackling this massive source of greenhouse gas emissions.


REUTERS
A cow being measured for emissions. Cattle may be gentle creatures but farming them is contributing to climate change, says consumer group Foodwatch.
For most people, it's the very picture of rural bliss, of a life in tune with nature and the wholesome world of farming: the happy cow standing on a lush meadow, calmly chewing its cud, a calf at its side.

But for Thilo Bode, the sight of this gentle-eyed creature is everything but reassuring. Bode, the head of German consumer protection organization Foodwatch, warns: "The cow is a climate bomb."

Whether they are raised conventionally or organically, one thing cows have in common is that they burp and fart to their hearts' content. Like all ruminants, cows are constantly emitting methane -- a greenhouse gas that is 23 times more powerful than carbon dioxide -- from both ends. As malodorous as pigs may be, it is the gaseous emissions of billions of cattle, goats and sheep that are contributing to global warming.

Bode wanted to find out just how strong the effects of the greenhouse gases methane, nitrous oxide and CO2 are. On Monday Foodwatch published a comprehensive study of the effects of agriculture on the climate, the first study of its kind that differentiates between conventional and organic farming. The scientists who conducted the study, with Germany's Institute for Ecological Economy Research (IOeW), accounted for both the CO2 emissions resulting from the production of feed and fertilizers, as well as the land requirements and productivity of various production methods.

The results are enough to send diehard fans of steaks and burgers into a panic. Even if all farms and methods, organic or otherwise, were optimized to reduce their effects on the climate, Foodwatch concludes that the principal approach to making agriculture more climate-friendly would require a drastic reduction in beef production. This would mean a radical increase in the price of steaks and the like. "It's time we went back to the days of the Sunday roast," says Bode.

A Blind Spot in Climate Protection Policy

But when it comes time to break the bad news to the average citizen, politicians are suddenly thin on the ground. Agriculture is the blind spot in the German government's climate protection policy. Farmers are for the most part exempt from an ambitious national program to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent compared to 1990 levels by the year 2020, through methods such as better home insulation, energy conservation and the use of gasoline substitutes. Ironically, German agriculture is responsible for 133 million tons of CO2-equivalent emissions, bringing it close to the level of emissions attributable to road traffic (152 million tons).


FROM THE MAGAZINE
Find out how you can reprint this DER SPIEGEL article in your publication. Officials at the German Agriculture Ministry headed by Horst Seehofer, a member of the conservative Christian Social Union (CSU), offer a disarmingly simple explanation: It is "too difficult, from a methodological point of view," to measure the greenhouse gases that are emitted in connection with fertilizer application, the spraying of pesticides and herbicides, cattle digestion and the draining of wetlands. Meanwhile, the Environment Ministry has a completely different take on the matter: "We have exempted agriculture from the climate protection strategy in order to limit the number of potential sources of conflict," says a senior member of the staff of Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel, a member of the Social Democrat Party (SPD).

Hans-Joachim Koch, who, until recently, advised the government in his former capacity as chairman of the German Advisory Council on the Environment, is even more direct when he says: "The lobby is well-organized." His successor, Martin Faulstich, agrees. "No one dares to say that we ought to eat less meat and more plant-based protein," says Faulstich, who has announced plans to commission a special report on agriculture.

The council is especially concerned about the loosening of environmental protection standards in the context of the planned Environmental Code. The Agriculture Ministry has managed to avert rules that relate to agriculture, such as a ban on draining wetlands. Now the draft legislation will be submitted to the German parliament, the Bundestag, after the summer break -- but without such proposals.

The results of the Foodwatch study clearly illustrate how important it is to include the farming sector.

The worst source of agricultural emissions, making up 30 percent of the total, is the draining of wetlands. The large amounts of CO2 trapped in the soil of wetlands are released when the land is used for farming. According to the IOeW study, the only way to stop these adverse effects on the climate would be to restore the wetlands. The resulting loss of land would have to be offset by doing away completely with the farming of crops for biofuels, a practice that is already considered questionable in terms of CO2 emissions, because of the large amounts of fertilizer it consumes.

But, in Foodwatch's assessment of the results of the IOEW study, organic agriculture is also not nearly as climate-friendly as many consumers believe. A complete conversion to climate-optimized organic farming, which requires more land, would reduce emissions by about 20 percent. However, this would be principally the result of not using nitrogen fertilizer, with its energy-intensive production and release of nitrous oxide in the fields. Nitrous oxide is 300 times as harmful as carbon dioxide.

Low Marks for Organic Farming

If the amount of land being farmed stays at current levels, the result would be high productivity losses. There would have to be a 70-percent decline in the production of meat and milk. The beneficial effect on the climate would be achieved primarily by eliminating the number of cattle, rather than through the use of organic methods.

Organic farming also scores less favorably when it comes to fattening cattle. The organically raised bull has a less beneficial impact on the climate than his highly cultivated fellow cattle, even when feed production is taken into account. The organically raised bull needs more room and also requires traditional litter. This produces emissions, unlike the perforated floors on which highly cultivated turbo-cattle spend their short lives.

According to Foodwatch's analysis, this is where a conflict with animal rights groups is likely to arise. But one thing is clear: Anyone who believes that by buying a rib eye steak from an organic store they are automatically contributing to climate protection is mistaken.

The difference can be illustrated by drawing a comparison with automobile emissions. The production of one kilo of grass-fed beef causes the same amount of emissions as driving 113.4 kilometers (70.4 miles) in a compact car. Because of more intensive production methods, producing one kilo of conventional beef is the equivalent of driving only 70.6 kilometers (43.9 miles).


DER SPIEGELA kilo of cheese, produced conventionally, comes to 71.4 kilometers (44.3 miles) of driving, while organic cheese is somewhat more favorable, at 65.5 kilometers (40.7 miles). Producing a kilo of pork causes the equivalent of only 25.8 kilometers (16 miles) of driving, and only 17.4 kilometers (10.8 miles) for organic pork.

Vegans eat in a decidedly climate-friendly way. However, even opting to go without beef can significantly improve a person's carbon footprint.

But how do we convince farmers and consumers to produce and consume in ways that are easier on the climate?

According to Foodwatch, having the agriculture sector participate in emissions trading is not feasible. Instead, Foodwatch wants to see the European Union eliminate its agricultural subsidies and introduce emissions taxes and environmental duties. This would reward farmers for CO2-friendly production. Consumers would be the ones paying for the new system, with the (intended) result being a substantial increase in the cost of meat, milk and cheese.

Environment Minister Gabriel holds very similar views. In a strategy document, which is still confidential, Gabriel actively seeks conflict with the agricultural lobby. According to Gabriel, €40 billion ($26 billion) in agricultural subsidies can only be justified if the money does not end up harming the climate. He also wants to introduce an environmental inspection system that would prohibit the importation of feed produced in former rainforest areas. According to the Gabriel document, "we need a radical restructuring of subsidies." It argues that farmers should only receive payment for things that "have a positive effect on nature and the environment."

In expressing these views, the environment minister is placing himself squarely in opposition to Seehofer and taking sides with the Brussels Commission, which hopes to redefine up to 17 percent of agricultural subsidies as quickly as possible, from direct payments to farmers to agricultural climate protection.

On Tuesday Seehofer, who opposes the idea, met with federal and state agricultural experts in Bonn to finalize a packet of climate protection measures. The plan includes proposals for "more efficient fertilizing," new animals that release less methane and investment assistance for the purchase of "environmentally-friendly agricultural equipment." It also calls for a reduction in the amount of farmland in use.

In truth, the plan merely calls for actions that have long been required or approved on a voluntary basis. Concrete conservation goals are not specified, and there is no mention of reducing the number of cows.

Seehofer's senior staff members are only too aware that these measures are not enough to noticeably reduce greenhouse gas emissions. According to high-level ministry officials, a drastic reduction in greenhouse gases from agriculture can only be achieved if everyone consumes less meat, milk, cheese and yoghurt. But the same officials concede that this is something they neither wish nor have the authority to require anyone to do.


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Seehofer's staff fear that imposing a climate tax on meat or milk would lead to a social and political outcry -- and to outsourcing of production overseas. For this reason, they argue, it makes absolutely no sense to choose this route.

But Foodwatch believes that this is the only reasonable approach, and it is not alone in its assessment. The World Wildlife Fund, Greenpeace and many experts hold similar views. The Federation of German Consumer Organizations wants to see both the agricultural sector and the Advisory Council on the Environment be included in climate policy.

The Greens favor a climate bonus, and their European Parliament member Friedrich-Wilhelm Graefe zu Baringdorf believes that a CO2 tax makes sense, as long as it is introduced for all industries. However, says Baringdorf, the tax should not be used to replace agricultural subsidies, and the subsidy system needs to be completely revamped.

Baringdorf, an organic farmer himself, says that a certain amount of restraint in meat production would be appropriate. "But let's be honest," he adds. "I don't believe that the world will come to an end because of cows burping and farting."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

Friday, February 27, 2009

Why Vegan? or "Knife & Fork U"

It was 1987, and I was a first year student at De Anza College in California when my environmental/social justice awakening began. Their Liberal Arts degree program got me thinking about evolution, ancient history, and the magical ecological processes of planet Earth.

With other concerned students and supportive professors we launched the Green Future Club, hosted a Rainforest Awareness Week, and established an on-campus recycling project that exists to this day. I gave up my traditional Alberta-raised, British parent-influenced meat-centric diet, learned to soak beans and spice tofu, and reveled in my new 'direct action' veggie lifestyle.

Years later, still studying, still living in poverty, I was searching for affordable accommodation in Victoria. I found an opportunity with a compromise attached - the animal rights occupant insisted on a vegan flat-mate. What the heck, I thought, it's time for the next phase of my personal evolutionary growth. Who knew the rather enormous learning curve involved in living without any animal products at all! I'm now adept at reading labels, scanning websites for hidden animal products in products from soap to dental floss to beer and wine. I've never been physically healthier, or more spiritually self-satisfied.


[(a version of this article is published in the January/February Watershed Sentinel magazine - www.watershedsentinel.ca)]





As mainstream corporate culture catches up with the awareness that scientists and informed citizens have been broadcasting for years, decades, about our need to make more environmentally friendly lifestyle choices, I'm eternally grateful to those who helped me learn, and think, and live as gently as possible on this beautiful planet. I hope this story, and the information that follows, inspires you to consider ways you can live a healthier and environmentally gentler lifestyle - for the good of all.

Beyond Carbon: What's Your Methane Footprint?

Though some continue to dispute it, the reality of the global climate crisis is now common knowledge. Phrases like 'greenhouse gases', and 'carbon footprint' are an integral part of our common lexicon. The discussion has shifted from whether we ought to act, to determining our best strategies. While mainstream discussions often focus on reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, other environmentally minded folk are considering the impact of our collective methane (CH4) footprint.

Basic Methane Facts

Methane is the main component in natural gas, and can be burned as fuel for heating, cooking, and transportation. Because it's commonly found throughout the solar system, NASA is considering methane as a potential rocket fuel.

Along with carbon dioxide, and some fluorinated gases, methane was an important part of the 2005 Kyoto Protocol discussion.1 Based on the amount of warming it causes, and the amount in the atmosphere, methane is considered the number two greenhouse gas.2 Over a hundred year time period, methane emissions have 25 times more impact on temperature than carbon dioxide emissions of the same mass.3"

Methane is produced by coalmining, landfills, decaying organic waste, and wastewater sludge, but animal agriculture is the number one source of emissions at 100 million tons per year.4 Interestingly, about 16% of the world's annual methane emissions are the result of cow burps.5 As cows digest their food, microorganisms break down the fibers and other nutrients. Hydrogen and carbon dioxide are released, and bacteria transform these into methane, up to 100 gallons of it per cow per day. The cows get rid of it mainly by burping.6

Capturing livestock methane

Ranchers and feedlot owners across America are working to capture livestock methane. "Energy recovery from methane, where economically viable, is of considerable benefit to the environment."7 A New Jersey landfill has been collecting methane since 2001 and currently generates about 13 megawatts of electricity, enough for about 13,000 homes for a year.8

In Argentina, researchers are managing cow burps by reducing grains, instead feeding alfalfa and other plants that are easier to digest. In an attempt to capture remaining cow burps, big red plastic tanks are strapped to the cow's backs, with tubes connecting the tanks to the cows' stomachs.9

Reducing your Methane Foodprint

Vegetarians, and especially vegans, sometimes marvel at the lengths people will go in order to protect their 'right' to consume animals. While methane capturing technology may prove useful in some instances, livestock methane can practically be eliminated with a simple paradigm shift - to a plant based diet.

In the 70s Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess distinguished between 'shallow' and 'deep' ecology. While shallow ecologists search for 'environmentally friendly' ways to live without significantly changing our often elaborate lifestyles, deep ecologists recognize the inherent value of all living beings and shape environmental policies accordingly. Deep ecologists "are motivated by love of nature as well as for humans. They recognize that we cannot go on with industrialism's 'business as usual.'"10

There are many reasons, aside from reducing greenhouse gases, to consider a plant based diet.

Leaders pledged, at the 1995 World Food Summit, to cut global hunger and extreme poverty in half by 201511 but, while world meat production has quadrupled in the past 50 years, approximately 840 million (about 14%) of earth's human population are still undernourished.12 The fact is, there are currently 3.5 times more livestock than humans on the planet - about 21 billion livestock animals which are, every day, consuming grains and cereals that might be fed to humans.13 "In 1900 just over 10% of the total grain grown worldwide was fed to animals; by 1950 this figure had risen to over 20%; by the late 1990s it stood at around 45%."14

While 1.5 billion people have no access to clean drinking water,15 about 70% of fresh water resources are diverted specifically for agriculture.16 According to Professor David Pimentel at Cornell University, 500 litres of water are needed to produce 1kg of potatoes, 900 litres per kg of wheat, 3,500 litres per kg of digestible chicken flesh and 100,000 litres for 1kg of beef.17

In addition to inadequate food distribution systems, current methods of global food production also play a significant role in the continuing global food crisis. The industrial world exports grain to 'developing' countries, where an "efficient, plant-based agricultural model is being replaced with intensive livestock rearing, which also pollutes the air and water and renders the once-fertile land dead and barren."18

Health Considerations of a plant based diet

A Science Advisor to the American Institute for Cancer Research reports "the vast majority of all cancers, cardiovascular diseases, and other forms of degenerative illness can be prevented simply by adopting a plant-based diet."19 We also know that the risk of death from heart disease for vegetarians is half that of non-vegetarians, and vegetarians have lower rates of cancer, heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, gallstones, kidney disease, obesity, and colon disease.20 And let's not forget that Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, first surfaced in England in 1986, with the most recent case in Canada reported in February 2008.21

It's easy to attain all the necessary vitamins and minerals from a plant based diet. The Vegetarian Society of England reports "excess dietary protein may lead to health problems Š one of the benefits of a vegetarian diet is that it contains adequate but not excessive protein Š it would be very difficult to design a vegetarian diet that is short on protein."22

Some vegans supplement their diets with vitamins and minerals including B12, iron, and calcium. There's plenty of good information available about how to live a healthy vegetarian or vegan lifestyle, and lots of people, including professional athletes, are doing it.

Animal Rights Reasons to consider a plant based diet

John Robbins, author of Diet for a New America and Healthy at 100, suggests it's time to consider the impact of living alongside six billion others. "I just don't see any way that free range grass-fed beef can be anything other than a food for the privileged. It's just too resource intensive. If there were fewer of us, then I could see how it would work. But I can't turn my back on the literally billions of us who are hungry. Š. We can't continue to exploit the Earth, we've got to protect it and preserve it."23

George Monbiot, in a Guardian article titled Why vegans were right all along, concluded "as a meat-eater, I've long found it convenient to categorise veganism as a response to animal suffering or a health fad Š it now seems plain that it's the only ethical response to what is arguably the world's most urgent social justice issue. We stuff ourselves, and the poor get stuffed."24

Lee Hall, Legal Director with Friends of Animals, believes "the life of the vegetarian is direct action. It is direct action for environmental justice. It is direct action for global food security, and thus for world peace. It is direct action for the liberation of other animals. The vegetarian addresses the most urgent social justice issues, and works not at the branches, but at the roots."25

Conclusion

A 2005 University of Chicago study, which examined both direct and indirect emissions gases (i.e., CO2 emissions due to fossil fuel combustion, and methane and nitrous oxide CO2-equivalent emissions due to animal-based food production), finds "a person consuming a mixed diet with the mean American caloric content and composition causes the emissions of 1,485 kg CO2-equivalent above the emissions associated with consuming the same number of calories, but from plant sources. Far from trivial, nationally this difference amounts to over 6% of the total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. We conclude by briefly addressing the public health safety of plant-based diets, and find no evidence for adverse effects."26

From various perspectives, it's clear that a plant based diet is healthier for individuals and for the planet overall. Of course there are those in unique circumstances who will disagree for various reasons, but the time is now to engage the dialogue, do the research, and consider that direct action to save the world is as close as your next meal.



Resources

1 http://www.alternate-energy-sources.com/kyoto-treaty.html
2 http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/oct/25/co-2-gases-fuel-climate-fears
3 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane#cite_ref-4
4 http://earthsave.org/globalwarming.htm
5 Miller, G. Tyler. Sustaining the Earth: An Integrated Approach. U.S.A.: Thomson Advantage Books, 2007. 160. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane
6 http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0816/p13s01-sten.html
7 http://www.tva.gov/greenpowerswitch/landfill.htm
8 New Jersey Landfills Capture The Methane They Produce, Turn It Into Energy http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/27/new-jersey-landfills-capt_n_138076.html
9 http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/07/cow-burps-climate.php
10 http://www.deepecology.org/movement.htm
11 FAO, 'The State of Food Insecurity in the World' 2002; republished at www.vegansociety.com/environment/land
12 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Agricultural Data 2002 www.fao.org; republished at www.vegansociety.com/environment/land
13 ibid.
14 Prof. V. Smil, 'Rationalizing Animal Food Production,' in Feeding the World: A Challenge for the 21st Century, MIT Press, London, 2000; republished at www.vegansociety.com/environment/land
15 www.blueplanetproject.net/documents/RTW_handbill.pdf
16 FAO, Review of agricultural water use per country www.fao.org/ag/agl/aglw/aquastat/water_use/index.stm; republished at www.vegansociety.com/environment/water
17 R. Goodland & D. Pimentel, 'Sustainability and Integrity in the Agriculture Sector,' Ecological Integrity: Integrating Environment, Conservation and Health, D. Pimentel, L. Westra, R. F. Noss (eds), Island Press, 2000; republished at www.vegansociety.com/environment/water
18 http://www.all-creatures.org/tytt/env-animalag.html
19 T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D., Senior Science Advisor to the American Institute for Cancer Research; republished at madcowboy.com
20 Virginia Messina, coauthor of the American Dietetic Association position paper on vegetarian diets, Messina, Mark, and Messina, Virginia, The Dietician's Guide To Vegetarian Diets: Issues and Applications, Aspen Publishers, Gaithersburg, Maryland, 1996, pg. 58; republished at madcowboy.com
21 www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23360165
22 www.vegsoc.org/info/protein.html
23 http://www.healthyat100.org/display.asp?catid=6,28&pageid=168_live_where_our_ecological_footprint_is_lighter.
24 George Monbiot, "Why Vegans Were Right All Along," Guardian Unlimited, 24 Dec. 2002 http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2002/dec/24/christmas.famine
25 "Bringing Social Justice to the Table" - http://www.dissidentvoice.org/July2004/Hall0727.htm
26 "Diet, Energy, and Global Warming" - geosci.uchicago.edu/~gidon/papers/nutri/nutriEI.pdf


http://janinebandcroft.blogspot.com
http://relativenewz.ca

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Link found between Alzheimer's, mad cow protein

Thursday, February 26, 2009

2/26) 19:56 PST -- The latest in a recent flurry of clues on the workings of Alzheimer's disease comes from Yale University researchers who found a link between the disorder and the prion protein, which can cause mad cow disease and other maladies.

The Yale team found that the prion protein, whose normal function is to maintain brain health, may contribute to nerve damage if it becomes entangled with a protein fragment that scientists consider a chief suspect as a cause for Alzheimer's disease.

That suspect fragment, the amyloid beta peptide, builds up in the gluey plaques in the brain that are a characteristic sign of Alzheimer's, a progressive neurodegenerative disease. The amyloid peptide seems to stick to the prion protein, block its benign effects and interfere with learning and memory, the Yale group said in a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

'Very tantalizing'
"It's very tantalizing," said Dr. Lennart Mucke, director of the Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease, who wrote a commentary on the Yale theory in the same issue. Mucke is part of a robust community of Bay Area scientists who are trying to ferret out the root causes of Alzheimer's disease and develop new medicines.

The prion work adds to a spate of new leads produced at the Gladstone Institute at UCSF's Mission Bay campus, the Buck Institute for Age Research in Novato, South San Francisco biotechnology leader Genentech Inc. and other research teams.

The study by Dr. Stephen Strittmatter and his Yale colleagues raises the possibility of a link between Alzheimer's and the family of prion diseases that includes mad cow disease and a related human neurodegenerative illness called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. But the evidence so far shows no sign that Alzheimer's disease involves a prion protein with the deformed structure seen in mad cow and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Such misfolded prions can arise from genetic mutations or can be carried into the body by infectious particles from tainted meat.

Mucke said that the prion protein, if it is involved in Alzheimer's, is probably in its normal form. There's no evidence that the disease somehow releases infectious prions. "I don't believe it's communicable," he said.

Other new theories
The prion study does not contradict other new theories about Alzheimer's, which all suggest fresh potential mechanisms by which the amyloid peptide or its parent, a protein called APP, may wreak destruction on the brain, said Dr. Dale Bredesen of the Buck Institute. Each theory opens potential new avenues to experimental therapies, he said. So far, much of the drug discovery in Alzheimer's has been focused on simply clearing the amyloid peptide and its plaques from the brain, on the theory that they cause broad physical or chemical damage, Bredesen said. But new work shows that APP and the amyloid peptide are involved in sensitive signaling networks that can go awry and destroy healthy nerves.

"I think we're seeing a fundamental switch in the view of the disease," he said. Recent failures of experimental drugs aimed at the amyloid peptide alone suggest that additional tactics are needed, he said. "Amyloid beta was the tip of the iceberg, but there's more."

Bredesen has his own overarching theory. He sees APP as a molecular switch on the nerves that flips between health and destruction. The protein can split up into three parts that each nourish the nerve. Or it can fracture differently into four parts that each attack the nerve - and one of those destructive four is the amyloid peptide, he said.

Search for a therapy
In the search for a possible therapy for Alzheimer's, Bredesen is focusing on a molecule that seems to block the destruction switch. The nerve growth factor netrin-1 appears to curb the release of the amyloid peptide from APP, he said. Work is under way on methods to deliver netrin-1 to people with early signs of Alzheimer's, but it could take five years to produce an approved drug, he said.

Mucke said the Gladstone Institute is working on an array of strategies, which include preventing the amyloid peptide from finding molecules that pass along its destructive signals.

Scientists are starting to see Alzheimer's as a complex disease like cancer or hypertension, which can arise from various root causes. That means patients may need a cocktail of several drugs, and maybe a custom-made mix for each individual.

"I'm absolutely convinced that different people get Alzheimer's for different reasons, and drug development will have to take that into account," Mucke said.

E-mail Bernadette Tansey at btansey@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 8 of the San Francisco Chronicle


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/25/MNC7164VHL.DTL

Monday, February 23, 2009

Ministers in imported blood blunder accused of cover-up

Sophie Goodchild, Health Editor

THE Government was today accused of a cover-up over an NHS scandal involving thousands of victims infected by contaminated blood.

Campaigners claim ministers withheld dozens of documents relating to the blunder that left nearly 5,000 patients with deadly diseases.

The use of imported blood that had not been properly screened exposed victims to blood viruses including Aids and Hepatitis C more than 20 years ago. Nearly half, including children, have died as a direct result.

But other terminally ill survivors of the scandal, called "the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS", have spoken out before an official report into the case.

Published on Monday, the findings of this two-year independent inquiry are expected to be hugely critical of how victims have been treated.

Campaign group Tainted Blood told the Standard that Whitehall officials have still not released at least 30 documents to the inquiry panel chaired by former solicitor general Lord Archer of Sandwell.

Spokesman Gareth Lewis said victims want an official apology, full compensation for their trauma, a full package of medical care and an admission that evidence of the disaster was ignored by successive governments. He said: "My biggest concern is the evidence has been there yet successive governments have tried to hide it.

"It is only through freedom of information laws that we are in the situation we are. But there are still about 30 documents that have not been released that could help us find out the truth about what happened. We just want closure."

The full scale of the contamination scandal only began to emerge at the height of Britain's Aids scare. It was discovered that batches of imported blood and blood products had not been properly screened and were infected with viruses.

Victims included those suffering from haemophilia, a condition in which sufferers lack a blood-clotting protein. This means they require regular blood transfusions.

Those affected spent years battling for any financial settlement because it was difficult to prove exactly which batches of blood were infected.

Eventually they were granted one-off payouts of up to £80,000 on the grounds they were not expected to live. But the development of antiviral drugs has meant many have survived.

The fear now is that survivors are at risk of developing mad cow disease or CJD from the infected blood transfusions and products they received as far back as 20 years ago.

This follows confirmation that an elderly haemophilia sufferer has died from the human form of mad cow disease after contracting it as the result of treatment with infected blood-clotting agent more than 20 years ago.

The Standard has also learned that the US pharmaceutical companies which supplied tainted blood and blood products to the NHS have now agreed to settle with British victims.

This will put pressure on the British Government to revise its compensation deals.

A Department of Health spokesperson said: “We have great sympathy for the patients and families affected by contaminated blood products in the 1970s and 1980s.

“This Government has gone further than any other administration in making information available. Only 35 of the 4,500 documents released to the
Archer enquiry so far have been withheld in full or in part – less than one per cent. The majority of these were withheld because they contain personal information, legal advice or on health and safety grounds.

“The facts are now known around this distressing episode and we have introduced tough measures to protect patients."

Treatment gave me HIV when I was 13

BLOOD-contamination victim Andrew March, from Fulham, says he has been made to feel "like a leper".

The composer, now 35, was 13 when his parents told him he had HIV as a result of treatment for a blood disorder.

The Royal College of Music graduate suffers from haemophilia. Mr March was given injections to stabilise the disorder but doctors failed to realise the batches they used of imported blood-clotting protein were not properly screened.

He told the Evening Standard: ''The headmaster at my school said he would have to disinfect the place when he found out (I had HIV). It made me feel like a leper."


http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23648141-details/Ministers+in+imported+blood+blunder+accused+of+cover-up/article.do

USDA to meat industry: Give shoppers more details

By MARY CLARE JALONICK – 2 days ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration has asked the meat industry to voluntarily give the public more information about where their food comes from.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told consumer groups, farm groups and meat industry leaders earlier this week that the administration would call for stricter labels on fresh meat and other foods that would show where an animal was born, raised and slaughtered.

The action comes after President Barack Obama returned from Canada, which has joined Mexico in protesting the so-called "country of origin" labels in a complaint to the World Trade Organization. The Agriculture Department abruptly canceled a scheduled announcement of the decision Wednesday morning, with little explanation, a day before Obama's trip.

The department announced the changes Friday afternoon, after Obama's return, and Vilsack sent a letter to the meat industry detailing the requests.

"The Department of Agriculture will be closely reviewing industry compliance," Vilsack said in the letter, dated Friday.

In calling for the stricter guidelines, the Obama administration is breaking from rules announced by the department shortly before President George W. Bush left office. The labeling law was enacted in a wide-ranging farm bill last year, but much of it was left up to interpretation by the Department of Agriculture.

Supporters of the labeling law were not happy with the Bush administration's version of the rules, which they said allowed meat companies to be vague about where an animal was born, raised and slaughtered.

The Bush administration rule, which won praise from Canada, still takes effect next month. Vilsack told stakeholders the administration will write new rules if the meat industry does not comply with the voluntary standards.

Besides the more detailed labels, Vilsack also said the law should cover more foods that are defined as "processed." For example, roasted peanuts and cured bacon are exempt from the law because they are considered processed.

The labeling requirements, which would apply to fresh meats and some perishable fruits and vegetables, have long been debated in Congress. The meat industry and retailers responsible for the labels have protested the changes, saying they are burdensome and could lead to higher prices. But consumer groups and northern state ranchers who compete with the Canadian beef industry favor them.

Some of the law's leading opponents have been grocery stores and large meatpacking companies, many of which mix U.S. and Mexican beef, and other businesses involved in getting products to supermarkets.

Somebody needs to tell these folks, its NOT just about cows anymore, or brain or spinal cord tissue!

Cattle rendering firms gear up for new FDA rule
AP

Last update: February 22, 2009 - 12:42 PM


WORTHINGTON, Minn. - Cattle rendering businesses in southwestern Minnesota are getting ready for a new Food and Drug Administration rule aimed at preventing mad cow disease from reaching the food supply.
Some say the rule, which takes effect in April, will lead to higher costs for beef and dairy producers who will be required to clearly mark animals that are 30 months of age or older.

Rendered cattle product ends up in numerous places — including livestock feed, dog food, cosmetics, soaps and hand creams. Beginning April 27, rendering facilities will be required to remove the brain and spinal cord of all cattle ages 30 months and older if they plan to use the dry material as a feed ingredient. If the brain and spinal cord are not removed, the renderers will need to find new uses for the material.

"We don't want to take any chances of (infected material) getting into a food source," said Angie Raatz, of the Pipestone County Soil and Water Conservation District and a member of the Minnesota Department of Agriculture's Rendering Study Group steering committee.

The FDA regulation is aimed at providing an added layer of protection against mad cow, a brain disease that has been linked to more than 150 human deaths worldwide, mostly in Britain. Scientists believe the human version of mad cow is transmitted when people eat tainted beef. The United States has had no known human cases linked to U.S. beef.

Larry Risty, director of marketing for Central Bi-Products in Redwood Falls, said the company is building a new facility in Long Prairie to render restricted animals. Risty said the company is examining different ways to use the rendered product, from creating fertilizer and fuel to energy production.

"That's for the rendered dry material," Risty said. "The fats we can use in the facility, itself, as a fuel to run the boilers."

At this time, Risty said, it's not feasible to do the brain and spinal cord removal.

"Eventually, there may be equipment to make that work," he added.

Central Bi-Products will charge a per-animal fee for cattle that are either 30 months of age or older, or whose age cannot be verified.

Darling International's Blue Earth facility, which receives carcasses from Klarenbeek and Son Rendering in Luverne, already requires cattle producers to clearly mark animals.

Allen Klarenbeek is a contract hauler for Darling and services Rock, Nobles, Pipestone and Murray counties, as well as portions of Cottonwood and Jackson counties. He said he isn't currently planning to charge producers an extra fee for picking up restricted cattle.

Mark Myers, chief operating officer for Darling International's office in Des Moines, Iowa, said renderers have limited options if they aren't going to remove the brain and spinal cord from restricted carcasses.

"We can either not pick up cattle over 30 months or provide a service to the producer that we will haul them directly to the landfill," said Myers. "Specifically in Iowa (not picking up the animals) is not an option we're considering."

The age restriction rule on rendered animals has been a topic of food safety discussion for seven or eight years. But with no known human cases of mad cow disease in the U.S., some renderers wonder if the rule is necessary.

"We haven't had a problem with cattle over 30 months in this country, and we haven't found a direct correlation," Risty said. "We have been under the impression that the present rules have been working pretty good."

At Central Bi-Products, the rule will mean additional documentation and extra fees. Beef and dairy producers will be required to sign a form stating that any animal over 30 months of age will be clearly marked — most likely with an orange paint stick mark on the forehead.

The extra fees would help offset costs of transportation to Long Prairie — which is about 100 miles from Redwood Falls

New deal urged for UK blood scandal victims

• Infected patients' families need cash aid, says inquiry
• Ministers criticised for refusing to give evidence

The government will today come under pressure to forge a new compensation deal for thousands of people with haemophilia who were given blood tainted with HIV and hepatitis C, as a long-awaited report from an independent inquiry into the scandal is published.

More than a quarter of those infected as a result of blood transfusions have died in what Robert Winston described as "the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS". Many are terminally ill. The inquiry heard that widows and children have suffered as a result of a financial settlement that fails to meet their needs.

The report of the independent inquiry, set up two years ago by Lord Morris of Manchester and chaired by the former solicitor general Lord Archer, will be an exhaustive account of what went wrong in the 1970s and 1980s.



Haydn Lewis, infected with contaminated blood, tells his story Link to this audio
It will criticise organisations, rather than individuals, for mistakes and for acting too slowly to halt importations of infected blood from paid donors in the US, some of whom were drug addicts and prisoners with hepatitis C infection from needle use.

The inquiry heard evidence from Lord Owen, who called for Britain to become self-sufficient in blood while a minister in the 1970s and was dismayed by the lack of progress and also by the destruction of important documents after the scandal had become public.

It will demand action to prevent future blood scandals, raising the issue of variant CJD - the human form of mad cow disease. It is known that vCJD entered the blood supply through donations from people who did not know they were infected. Last week it was confirmed that one haemophiliac with vCJD from contaminated blood had died, although not from the disease.

Above all, the report will say that the government must now address the financial hardship of those with haemophilia and their families who have suffered as a result of tainted blood from the NHS. Compensation payments have been inadequate and some are living in poverty. People who became infected with hepatitis C, a potentially lethal liver virus, have been unable to get insurance except at prohibitive cost.

Campaigners welcomed the publication of the report, calling it the only real attempt to reveal the full scale of the tragedy. Chris James, chief executive of the Haemophilia Society, said: "Successive governments have shamefully refused to fund a public inquiry, and an independent inquiry held in public was the only way forward if the voices of those infected and the bereaved were ever to be heard. We are immensely grateful to Lord Archer and his inquiry team for their tireless endeavours to reveal the true depth of this disaster."

He called for the government to create a National Haemophilia Committee, a body that would help patients to participate in their treatment, and full healthcare provision for survivors in addition to insurance and compensation.

"There are vital lessons to be learned in ensuring that decisions are made in an open and transparent way that fully involves patients," he said.

About 4,800 haemophiliacs were infected with hepatitis C through blood transfusions in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and around 1,200 of those were also infected with HIV. Most of the latter - more than 800 - have died. At the time of the inquiry's launch, in February 2007, there had been 1,757 deaths. The numbers are steadily rising. Some of those who gave evidence have since died.

Carol Grayson, whose husband Peter Longstaff died after becoming infected with hepatitis C and HIV, hoped the report would provide closure for survivors. "It is going to be very emotional as there are lots of people who will not be there to hear the recommendations, but hopefully it will provide relief for some people who have campaigned for more than 20 years."

In spite of the scale of the tragedy, the government has consistently refused to hold its own public inquiry.

Today's report is expected to point to new evidence of what went wrong from thousands of documents that were eventually handed over by the government. It will also criticise ministers for refusing to give evidence. Those involved in the inquiry believe it will be hard for the government to dismiss its findings because it was set up and conducted by respected parliamentarians and is independent of vested interests.


New deal urged for blood scandal victims
• Infected patients' families need cash aid, says inquiry
• Ministers criticised for refusing to give evidence

The government will today come under pressure to forge a new compensation deal for thousands of people with haemophilia who were given blood tainted with HIV and hepatitis C, as a long-awaited report from an independent inquiry into the scandal is published.

More than a quarter of those infected as a result of blood transfusions have died in what Robert Winston described as "the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS". Many are terminally ill. The inquiry heard that widows and children have suffered as a result of a financial settlement that fails to meet their needs.

The report of the independent inquiry, set up two years ago by Lord Morris of Manchester and chaired by the former solicitor general Lord Archer, will be an exhaustive account of what went wrong in the 1970s and 1980s.



Haydn Lewis, infected with contaminated blood, tells his story Link to this audio
It will criticise organisations, rather than individuals, for mistakes and for acting too slowly to halt importations of infected blood from paid donors in the US, some of whom were drug addicts and prisoners with hepatitis C infection from needle use.

The inquiry heard evidence from Lord Owen, who called for Britain to become self-sufficient in blood while a minister in the 1970s and was dismayed by the lack of progress and also by the destruction of important documents after the scandal had become public.

It will demand action to prevent future blood scandals, raising the issue of variant CJD - the human form of mad cow disease. It is known that vCJD entered the blood supply through donations from people who did not know they were infected. Last week it was confirmed that one haemophiliac with vCJD from contaminated blood had died, although not from the disease.

Above all, the report will say that the government must now address the financial hardship of those with haemophilia and their families who have suffered as a result of tainted blood from the NHS. Compensation payments have been inadequate and some are living in poverty. People who became infected with hepatitis C, a potentially lethal liver virus, have been unable to get insurance except at prohibitive cost.

Campaigners welcomed the publication of the report, calling it the only real attempt to reveal the full scale of the tragedy. Chris James, chief executive of the Haemophilia Society, said: "Successive governments have shamefully refused to fund a public inquiry, and an independent inquiry held in public was the only way forward if the voices of those infected and the bereaved were ever to be heard. We are immensely grateful to Lord Archer and his inquiry team for their tireless endeavours to reveal the true depth of this disaster."

He called for the government to create a National Haemophilia Committee, a body that would help patients to participate in their treatment, and full healthcare provision for survivors in addition to insurance and compensation.

"There are vital lessons to be learned in ensuring that decisions are made in an open and transparent way that fully involves patients," he said.

About 4,800 haemophiliacs were infected with hepatitis C through blood transfusions in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and around 1,200 of those were also infected with HIV. Most of the latter - more than 800 - have died. At the time of the inquiry's launch, in February 2007, there had been 1,757 deaths. The numbers are steadily rising. Some of those who gave evidence have since died.

Carol Grayson, whose husband Peter Longstaff died after becoming infected with hepatitis C and HIV, hoped the report would provide closure for survivors. "It is going to be very emotional as there are lots of people who will not be there to hear the recommendations, but hopefully it will provide relief for some people who have campaigned for more than 20 years."

In spite of the scale of the tragedy, the government has consistently refused to hold its own public inquiry.

Today's report is expected to point to new evidence of what went wrong from thousands of documents that were eventually handed over by the government. It will also criticise ministers for refusing to give evidence. Those involved in the inquiry believe it will be hard for the government to dismiss its findings because it was set up and conducted by respected parliamentarians and is independent of vested interests.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/feb/23/haemophilia-blood-hiv-hepatitis

Sunday, February 22, 2009

World Ideologies as Explained by Reference to Cows

Pure Socialism
You have two cows. The government takes them and puts them in a barn
with everyone else's cows. You have to take care of all the cows. The
government gives you all the milk you need.

Bureaucratic Socialism
Your cows are cared for by ex-chicken farmers. You have to take care
of the chickens the government took from the chicken farmers. The
government gives you as much milk and eggs as the regulations say you
should need.

Fascism
You have two cows. The government takes both, hires you to take care
of them, and sells you the milk.

Nazism
You have two cows. The government shoots one for being of
insufficient genetic purity. Several Bureaucrats oversee your
operations with the surviving cow. They sell all of the milk, but you
are permitted to retain a portion of the profit. Later, the
government takes the remaining cow and shoots you for having had a
cow of insufficient genetic purity.

Pharaohism
The Gods have two cows, both given into your care. You must feed and
milk them. At regular intervals the Priests take the milk to the
Temple. The milk not used by the Gods is later shared with you. If
you don't give the Priests a problem they may let you into the
Afterlife.

Caesarism
Caesar, as The State, has granted you two cows. You must feed and
milk them. The Caesar's soldiers sometimes take the milk to Rome. If
you don't give them a problem they don't burn your farm.

Feudalism
You have two cows on the Manor's land. The Lord takes as much of the
milk as he wants. Also your wife and daughters when it suits him. If
you don't give the Sheriff a problem he won't burn your cottage.

Pure Communism
You have two cows. Your neighbors help you take care of them, and you
all share the milk.

Real World Communism
You share two cows with your neighbors. You and your neighbors bicker
about who has the most "ability" and who has the most "need".
Meanwhile, no one works, no one gets any milk, and the cows die of
starvation.

Russian Communism
You have two cows. You have to take care of them, but the government
takes all the milk. You steal back as much milk as you can and sell
it on the black market.

Russian Free Market Economy
You have two cows. You have to take care of them, but the Mafia takes
all the milk. You steal back as much milk as you can and sell it on
the "free" market.

Cambodian Communism
You have two cows. The government takes both and shoots you. No one
ever sees the cows or the milk again.
Militarianism
You have two cows. The government takes both and drafts you.

Totalitarianism
You have two cows. The government takes them and denies they ever
existed. Milk is banned. No one ever sees you again.

Authoritarianism
The State has two cows and a person to tend them. The State decides
what to do with the cows, the milk and the person.

Technocracy
You have registered two cows. Two guys in white lab coats inspect
them. Later, lab tests show you have a genetic defect. You are
terminated and someone else is given the cows.

Pure Democracy
You have two cows. Your neighbors decide who gets the milk.

Representative Democracy
You have two cows. Your neighbors pick someone to tell you who gets
the milk.

British Democracy
You have two cows. You feed them the remains of other cows and they
go mad. The government doesn't do anything.

Texas Democracy
You have two hundred thousand head of cattle. One of them gets Mad
Cow. You sue Oprah.

Bureaucratic Democracy
You have two cows. At first the government regulates what you can
feed them and when you can milk them. Then it pays you not to milk
them. Then it takes both, looses one in the system and milks the
other. It pours the milk down the drain. You are then required to
fill out forms accounting for the missing cows. And fines you for
clogging the drain.

Pure Capitalism
You have two cows. You sell one and buy a bull.

American Capitalism
You don't have any cows. The bank will not lend you money to buy
cows, because you don't have any cows to put up as collateral.

Enron Capitalism
You have two cows. You sell three of them to your publicly listed
company, using letters of credit opened by your brother-in-law at the
bank. He then executes a debt/equity swap with an associated general
offer so that you get all four cows back, with a tax exemption for
five cows. The milk rights of the six cows are transferred via an
intermediary to a Cayman Island company secretly owned by your CFO
who sells the rights to all seven cows back to your listed company.
The annual report says the company owns eight cows, with an option on
six more.

Globalism
You find someone in a Third World Country who has two cows. You pay
him a few cents a day to milk them. You ship the milk to the First
World and sell it at a huge profit.

Environmentalism
You own a parcel of rural land and put two cows on it. You are
immediately cited by the zoning enforcement division of the County's
Community Development Board. In short order several state and
national environmental groups file actions against you. Your water
rights are questioned. Your solid waste plan is questioned. Your
sanity is questioned. In a vain attempt to avoid a trial, you pay to
have an Environmental Impact Study done to determine the impact of
the cows on your neighbors. During the Public Comment phase you learn
that none of them want a smelly dairy in their backyards ¨¢ and that
one of them, anonymously, turned you in to Zoning Enforcement. You
are dragged into court anyway, and found guilty of a Code Violation.
You have 30 days to come into "compliance" or lose your property.
Every time you return to court to prove you are compliant, Community
Development has changed the code! All the while you are investigated
by scores of bureaucrats from all levels of government. Your business
hemorrhages red ink as the toll of fees, fines, court and legal costs
(and required bribes) mounts. You have to move your cows to
increasingly more remote locations as all the private land available
for grazing in your area is being quietly bought up by non-
governmental organizations and made into "nature preserves." Finally,
you move your cows onto public lands. The government, misled by
biased scientific studies conducted by scientists on the payrolls of
environmental and multinational organizations, becomes concerned
about erosion and bans you from grazing your cows on public land
(which you, as a citizen, "own"). Meanwhile, the Animal Rights
movement gets legislation passed banning you from milking or killing
your cows. Soon, to be in accordance with international treaties, the
government is forced to kill one of the cows to reduce overall
greenhouse gas emissions. While they are at it, they confiscate any
motor vehicle older than five years, for the same reason. Your
original rural property is then condemned under eminent domain and
made into a corridor for high tension power lines from the
new "clean" nuclear power plant in the next state. Your remaining cow
is taken by federal agents in SWAT gear in the dead of night and sent
to a regional holding facility from which it is sold to some guy in a
Third World Country who will be paid a few cents a day to milk it.
You may buy milk at the market, in recyclable containers, but only if
show your national ID card which includes encoded information on how
much milk you have already purchased in particular time period. If
your transaction is deemed unusual by an artificially intelligent
computer program it will be flagged for human attention. You may be
laundering milk! All the while, you will be required to continue to
pay taxes to support the public lands you are not permitted to use,
to pay for the research used to deny you the use of that land, and to
support the United Nations organization which oversees all public
lands (which will have been turned into UN bio-spheres by then).

Political Correctness
You are associated with (the concept of "ownership" is a symbol of
the phallocentric, war mongering, intolerant past) two differently -
aged (but no less valuable to society) bovines of non-specified
gender. You do not milk them for to do so would violate their rights
as a species. You wear all man-made materials, as you would never
consider harming these beautiful creatures of Gaia. You have no clue
where milk or hamburgers come from.

Surrealism
You have two giraffes. The government requires you to take harmonica
lessons.

Protectionism
You have two cows. Foreigners also have cows. You believe that those
foreigners are milking their cows and selling their milk here for
less than you can. You get the government to pass levies and tariffs
against foreign milk. You also get the government to compensate you
for your loss to foreign milk producers. Soon the government is
paying you not to milk your cows, while milk produced off shore sells
at an inflated price. You are paid to do nothing while poor children
go without milk.

Libertarianism
Its none of your damned business how many cows I've got or what I do
with 'em!

Pure Anarchy
You have two cows. Either you sell the milk at a fair price or your
neighbors try to take the cows and kill you.

Russian Anarchy
Your cows are shot in the street. You are shot in Mexico.

American Anarchy
The closest you ever got to a cow was your black leather jacket with
the circle A on the back. You wear ripped up jeans and have a stud
through your tongue. You think if you skate real rad maybe you can
smash the State.

Anarcho-Syndicalism
You have two cows. You want more control over the price of milk and
less government interference in your dairy operations. You and your
buddies stage a General Strike. Milk trucks are parked, blocking
important highways and access to key buildings and facilities. It
soon spreads to other industries, shutting down the nation. Nobody
get any milk until your demands are met.

Criminal Syndicalism
You don't own any cows, but you know who does. You and some guys with
names like "Fingers," "Lefty" and "Louie" hide shotguns under your
overcoats and go have a few "woids" with the guys with the cows.
After a bomb mysteriously goes off in a barn you have control of all
the milk on the Lower East Side.

Illuminism
A Secret Cabal has two cows. One is sacrificed in a Grove in
California. The other tells the President what to do.

Bruce Durnism
You only have one cow, and you're milking the bit for all its worth.

Author Unknown

CONTAGIOUS EQUINE METRITIS - CANADA

***********************************
A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: 11 Feb 2009
Source: Horsetalk.co.nz [edited]



Horses in 6 Canadian provinces were quarantined over contagious equine
metritis (CEM) on 11 Feb 2009. Canadian authorities have placed horses
under quarantine in 6 provinces as containment efforts against an outbreak
of (CEM) continue.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said it continued to respond to
the increasing detections of _Taylorella equigenitalis_, the bacterium that
causes CEM, in the United States. To date, 11 stallions and one mare have
tested positive to the disease in the USA. The 1st case was identified on a
central Kentucky farm in mid-December 2008.

The CFIA said potentially exposed animals have been identified in Alberta,
Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia. "As a
precaution, the CFIA has quarantined animals on the farms, and these
measures will remain in place until all potentially exposed mares and their
foals have tested negative for CEM," the agency said. It said more farms
may be quarantined as investigations in Canada and the US continue.

Testing was under way, with all results so far proving negative. Some
testing will not be completed until pregnant mares have given birth, the
agency said.

Canada tightened import requirement for live horses from the USA on 19 Jan
2009, and required additional certification for semen and embryo imports
from 29 Jan 2009. CEM is a venereal disease in horses which can affect the
reproductive ability of infected mares. It is treatable with antibiotics.

"The CFIA will continue to work with the United States Department of
Agriculture, provincial counterparts, affected producers and the equine
industry in this response effort," it said. "Any horse owner or
veterinarian who suspects a horse under their care may be infected with CEM
must immediately contact their local CFIA district office."

CEM is a federally reportable disease in Canada and there are international
trade implications if a country loses its CEM-free status.

--
communicated by:
ProMED-Mail rapporteur: Susan Baekeland

[For a more detailed look at the consequences of CEM to the horse industry
and individual animals, readers are encouraged to see ProMED-mail post
20090131.0442. - Mod.TG]

[see also:
Contagious equine metritis - USA (06): update 20090205.0512
Contagious equine metritis - USA (05): (ME) 20090131.0442
Contagious equine metritis - USA (04): (TX) 20090116.0178
Contagious equine metritis - USA (03): (WI) 20090109.0084
Contagious equine metritis - USA (02): (OK) 20090106.0054
Contagious equine metritis - USA: (KY), OIE 20090102.0012
2008
---
Contagious equine metritis - USA: (KY) 20081231.4122
2006
---
Contagious equine metritis - USA (WI): OIE 20061019.2998
2005
---
Contagious equine metritis - UK: OIE 20050408.1018
1998
---
Contagious equine metritis - USA (Calif., Maryland) 19980926.1921
Contagious equine metritis - USA (Kentucky) 19980222.0344
Contagious equine metritis - USA (California) 19980109.0063]

Friday, February 20, 2009

SCRAPIE, ATYPICAL, OVINE - NEW ZEALAND

**************************************
A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: Wed 18 Feb 2009
Source: The Age (Australia) [edited]



New Zealand's sheep industry is on alert after the discovery of a "new"
form of the brain disease scrapie in a research flock in Britain.

Two cheviot sheep sent as part of a New Zealand flock and a ewe born to 2
cheviots in the "closed" flock developed atypical scrapie, a fatal
degenerative disease that affects the nervous systems of sheep and goats.

"A likely explanation for the 3 cases of atypical scrapie is that they
arose spontaneously and were not infected from an exterior source," British
researchers said.

--
communicated by:
ProMED-mail rapporteur Susan Baekeland

[There has long been heartache among producers, researchers, and regulators
regarding the spontaneous or atypical form of scrapie, and BSE. A
spontaneous form is difficult to regulate, impossible to trace, and almost
defies research. The researchers on these spongiform encephalopathy
diseases are a determined lot and the atypical form does not make their job
easier. However, over the years there has been some sort of loose consensus
that the atypical form is spontaneous and beyond the regulatory grip of
agencies. - Mod.TG

The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of new Zealand is available at
. - CopyEd.MJ]

[see also:
2008
---
Scrapie, ovine - Portugal: (Guarda), OIE 20080522.1689
2007
---
Scrapie, sheep, goats - USA 20071204.3918
Scrapie, sheep - Romania: OIE 20070614.1941
Scrapie, atypical, sheep - USA (WY): 1st report 20070318.0949
Scrapie, sheep - Israel (Haifa): OIE 20070302.0739
2006
---
Scrapie, sheep - Denmark: OIE 20061014.2944
Scrapie, sheep - Hungary: OIE 20060630.1805
2005
---
Scrapie, sheep - Falkland Islands/Malvinas: OIE 20051203.3495
Scrapie, atypical, ovine - Falkland Islands 20051120.3371
Scrapie, sheep - Japan: OIE 20050430.1210
Scrapie, sheep - Slovenia: OIE 20050408.1017
Scrapie, sheep - Hungary: Imported, OIE 20050121.0206
2004
---
Scrapie, atypical, sheep - UK and Ireland 20041210.3274]

.................tg/mj/sh

RABIES, BOVINE - USA: (VIRGINIA)

********************************
A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: 19 Feb 2009
Source: DNR on line



Calves test positive for rabies near Linville
---------------------------------------------
A total of 3 calves from a farm near Linville recently tested positive for
rabies, according to the farm's owner. Although no specific animal has been
recognized as the carrier, a raccoon was found on the farm that tested
positive for the disease. The family that lives on the farm has been
treated with a series of rabies shots as a preventive measure. Health
officials described the outbreak as an isolated incident.

"We thought we were treating pneumonia," the farm owner, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said of the 1st case. "But the calf wasn't getting
better, so we called the vet."

The calf's remains were sent to the Virginia animal testing lab, where it
tested positive for the disease. A diagnosis of rabies can be confirmed
postmortem only through a pathology test on the animal's brain. The
following week, a set of twin calves from the farm also developed signs
consistent with rabies, and tests confirmed rabies in them as well. Health
officials said the public is not in any danger from the limited outbreak.

Rabies on farms rare
--------------------
According to the Virginia Department of Health's website, 18 cases of
rabies in cattle have been reported in Rockingham and Augusta counties in
the last decade.

Allen Gutshall, district environmental health program manager for the
Virginia Department of Health, said some people vaccinate horses or prize
bulls, but vaccinating an entire herd of livestock is not practical or
cost-effective. If a rabid animal is found among livestock, Gutshall
recommended calling a veterinarian before taking further action.

Sometimes something as simple as separating and observing the animals
exposed to the rabies carrier will determine whether the animals are sick
or if further action needs to be taken.

Getting rabies information
--------------------------
For a complete list of animals diagnosed with rabies in Virginia in the
past decade, log on to .

[byline: Regina Cyzick Harlow]

--
communicated by:
ProMED-Mail rapporteur Susan Baekeland

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Anthrax / Uganda

Anthrax kills 5 in Bushenyi
---------------------------
The health ministry has said 5 people have died after eating meat
believed to be infected with anthrax in Katunguru sub-county in
Bushenyi district. "A total of 159 people are being monitored by our
surveillance team for possible symptoms of anthrax after being
exposed to the risk," Paul Kaggwa, the health ministry spokesperson,
told The New Vision yesterday [17 Feb 2009].

The 1st 2 deaths occurred on Saturday [14 Feb 2009] at Kisenyi
landing site and 3 more deaths were registered between Saturday and
Tuesday [17 Feb 2009]. They are believed to have eaten a carcass of
an antelope. Two other people were sent to Lugazi health centre for
medical check up after complaining of abdominal pains. Kaggwa urged
people to desist from eating wild animals.

"The infected animal strayed out of Queen Elizabeth National Park
(QENP) around 27 Jan 2009 and the residents slaughtered it," said
Kaggwa. "They developed abdominal pains, the 1st symptom and it was
reported on 6 Feb 2009."

The health ministry has advised people in the affected area to report
to health centres if they develop symptoms associated with anthrax.

A joint team from the Uganda Wild Life Authority (UWA), the health
and agriculture ministries and the School of Public Health, Makerere
University, has been dispatched to Bushenyi to study the situation.
Moses Mapesa, the executive director of UWA, said he would wait for a
report from his technical team and health officials before confirming
the outbreak. "We have dealt with disease outbreaks before. We need
to get the confirmatory tests first," Mapesa said. Mapesa warned the
public against eating game meat.

Between August and October 2004, an outbreak of anthrax in Queen
Elizabeth National Park left 200 hippos dead. People who ate the
carcasses also died. The affected areas were Kisenyi and Kasenyi
landing sites and Kazinga Channel. This forced the UWA to suspend
tourism activities in the area.

[Byline: Anthony Bugembe]

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail

UK Meat-Board Downplays Scrappie Outbreak

Meat board downplays scrapie find in NZ ewes offshore


Wed, 18 Feb 2009
News: National

British research showing that a prion disease, atypical scrapie, may rise spontaneously in New Zealand sheep should not impact on the nation's meat exports, says an industry leader.
Meat and Wool industry board chairman Mike Petersen said on Wednesday that though the disease has a similar name to classical scrapie "there is no proof that it is linked at all".

"It's business as usual, and we don't expect there to be any impacts on the sector".

But Mr Petersen said there was a risk in people offshore confusing classical and atypical scrapie: "The last thing we need is to have these sorts of issues floating around".

Both diseases are transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) illnesses, a family of diseases that includes scrapie in sheep and goats, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, in cattle, chronic wasting disease in deer, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in people.

BSE and creutzfeldt-jacob disease can kill humans, but neither form of scrapie is known to affect people

Mr Petersen said more was now known about atypical scrapie than when it was first suspected in a New Zealand ewe held on a high-security research farm in Britain.

At the time, NZ authorities and industry officials questioned whether it might have been infected locally, but this has been discounted in research which has just been published with the conclusion that it has arisen spontaneously in three sheep from the NZ research animals offshore, which were all over six years old.

Now that it was regarded as a degenerative disease in ageing sheep, it was thought unlikely to have any production impact on NZ sheep, which usually are sent to slaughter after five years.

Classical scrapie can occur in much younger sheep, and may be capable of being spread from animal to animal. It is not present in New Zealand, and no cases of atypical scrapie have been recorded on NZ soil. New Zealand has never had the other main prion disease in livestock, BSE in cattle and chronic wasting disease in deer.

Atypical scrapie was identified first in 1998 in Norway and at that time was called Nor98. Most cases are detected in apparently healthy sheep by post mortem examination during routine slaughter.

The Food Safety Authority said today on its website that the UK spongiform encephalopathy advisory committee (SEAC) had concluded that: "It may be more appropriate to consider atypical scrapie as a distinct TSE of small ruminants and not simply a variant of what is now called scrapie".

An MAF executive, Peter Thomson, earlier this month posted a declaration that New Zealand is free from scrapie.


http://www.odt.co.nz/news/national/44062/meat-board-downplays-scrapie-find-nz-ewes-offshore

Ausies' Not Concerned about Scrapie Case

No concern about scrapie case

Thursday, 19/02/2009

Australia's sheep industry isn't worried about a case of scrapie found in a British research flock.

The two infected sheep originated from New Zealand, and Australian authorities say there's no implication for our scrapie-free status.

Scrapie affects the nervous system and is related to mad cow disease.

Ron Cullen, from the Sheepmeat Council of Australia, doesn't believe there any risk here.

"Every time something like this happens you re-check, you review your own procedures, but from our point of view I don't see this having any implications."

http://www.abc.net.au/rural/news/content/200902/s2495634.htm

Hoof and Mouth Outbreak in Israel

FOOT & MOUTH DISEASE - ISRAEL (02): OIE, SEROTYPE O, SPREAD
***********************************************
A ProMED-mail post

ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases


Date: Sun 15 Feb 2009
Source: OIE/WAHID Weekly Disease Information Vol. 22 - No. 08,
February 2009 [edited]



Information received on 15 Feb 2009 from Dr Moshe Chaimovitz,
Director, Veterinary Services and Animal Health, Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development, Beit Dagan, Israel

Summary
Report type: Follow-up report No. 2
Start date: 1 Feb 2009
Date of 1st confirmation of the event: 4 Feb 2009
Report date: 15 Feb 2009
Date submitted to OIE: 15 Feb 2009
Reason for notification: Reoccurrence of a listed disease
Date of previous occurrence: February 2008
Manifestation of disease: Clinical disease
Causal agent: Foot and mouth disease virus
Serotype: O
Nature of diagnosis: Suspicion, Clinical, Laboratory (basic),
Laboratory (advanced)
This event pertains to the whole country.

Related reports

New outbreaks
Outbreak 1: (Ilut) Ilut, Kineret, Hazafon
Date of start of the outbreak: 11 Feb 2009
Outbreak status: Resolved (12 Feb 2009)
Epidemiological unit: Village
Affected animals:
Species / Susceptible / Cases / Deaths / Destroyed / Slaughtered
Goats / 1 / 1 / 0 / 1 / 0
Sheep / 26 / 3 / 0 / 26 / 0

Affected population:
Symptoms were detected in a herd of 10 ewes, 3 rams, 13 lambs and one
goat (male). Four of them were affected with limping and vesicles on
the feet. All the herd has been destroyed and buried on spot [see commentary].

Epidemiology:
Source of the outbreak(s) or origin of infection: Unknown or
inconclusive; Fomites (humans, vehicles, feed, etc.)

Epidemiological comments:
A radius of 10 km around the farms has been put under movement
control of animals. The status of vaccination of all the ruminants in
this radius has been evaluated, and animals were revaccinated when
necessary. The serotype was found to be O, which is the only serotype
that could be found in the outbreaks which occurred in the last 20
years in Israel.

Control measures
Measures applied
- Quarantine
- Movement control inside the country
- Screening
- Vaccination in response to the outbreak (s)
- Disinfection of infected premises/establishment(s)
- Modified stamping out [see comment]
- No treatment of affected animals

Measures to be applied: No other measures

Diagnostic test results
Laboratory name and type: Virology Department, Kimron Veterinary
Institute (National laboratory)
Tests and results
Species / Test / Test date / Result
Sheep / pathogen isolation on cell culture / 13 Feb 2009 / Positive

--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail

[According to the information available in OIE's WAHID animal health
interface (which was inaugurated in 2005), FMD was notified by Israel
in 2005 (1 outbreak), 2007 (31 outbreaks) 2008 (1 outbreak) and 2009
(2 outbreaks so far). All those outbreaks were caused by FMDV
serotype O (for the topotype and strains, see
).
The 33 outbreaks reported during 2005-2008 included a total of 11 128
cattle, 2547 small ruminants (sheep and goats) and about 1300
wildlife (gazelles), of which -- respectively -- 863, 652 and 69 were
clinically affected, and 25, 288 and 28 died. Throughout the said
period, no culling or slaughtering of affected or exposed animals
were applied, excluding one single gazelle in 2007 (see posting
20070324.1025). It is thus rather surprising that, according to the
current follow-up report, the entire affected flock, comprising 27
small ruminants, has been stamped out, though the virus seems to be
similar to the one affecting Israel in previous years and in the 1st
outbreak in cattle during 2009 (see
).
An explanation concerning the background of this decision will be helpful.

It is also interesting to note whether possible contact, direct or
indirect, between the 2 affected holdings may have taken place,
leading to the spread. The distance between the 2 foci is
approximately 55 km. Maps are included in the follow-up reports.

FMD seems to be spreading in the region recently; outbreaks in Saudi
Arabia and Iraq have been discussed in previous postings.

FMD has recently been suspected or confirmed in 3 additional Middle
Eastern countries, namely Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, though
serotyping has not been available in all cases. On Mon 16 Feb 2009,
the Saudi daily Al-Watan reported that AlAhsaa county's local
veterinary diagnostic laboratory detected and confirmed 9 FMD
positive submitted samples collected from several cattle herds across
the county (translated from Arabic and summarized by the
California-based FMD News at Davis; see
).

It will be interesting to obtain their final observations as well as
information from other countries in the region, such as Iran, Syria,
Lebanon and Turkey. - Mod.AS]

[see also:
Foot & mouth disease - Iraq: (BA) 20090208.0577
Foot & mouth disease - Israel: OIE, untyped 20090204.0493
Foot & mouth disease - Saudi Arabia (02): vaccination 20090201.0447
Foot & mouth disease - Saudi Arabia: east, RFI 20090128.0387
Foot & mouth disease - Iraq: (BA) susp, RFI 20090119.0228
2008
----
Foot & mouth disease - Jordan: (Irbid) susp, RFI 20081231.4120
Foot & mouth disease - Jordan, Saudi Arabia: RFI 20080907.2785
Foot & mouth disease, livestock - Lebanon, Israel, OIE 20080206.0476
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel conf., Lebanon susp. 20080203.0436
Foot & mouth disease, livestock - Lebanon, Israel, OIE 20080206.0476
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel conf., Lebanon susp. 20080203.0436
2007
----
Foot & mouth disease, wild boar - Israel (N.&N.E.): corr 20070518.1578
Foot & mouth disease, wild boar - Israel (N.&N.E.) 20070517.1571
Foot & mouth disease - Israel, Palestinian Authority: OIE 20070405.1153
Foot & mouth disease, gazelle - Israel (L. Galilee) (02): conf, OIE
20070324.1025
Foot & mouth disease, gazelle - Israel (L. Galilee): susp. 20070322.1002
Foot & mouth disease - Israel (02): bovine, caprine, OIE 20070301.0729
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (05): Hazafon, OIE 20070207.0486
Foot & mouth disease - Israel: serotype O 20070129.0385
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (04): OIE 20070126.0348
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (03) 20070124.0314
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (02): OIE 20070106.0060
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel 20070104.0042
Foot & mouth disease, caprine - Israel (03) 20070104.0032
Foot & mouth disease, caprine - Israel (02): OIE 20070103.0021
Foot & mouth disease, caprine - Israel: serotype O 20070102.0010
2006
----
Foot & mouth disease, cattle - Israel (03): susp. 20060222.0570
Foot & mouth disease, cattle - Israel (02): correction 20060220.0561
Foot & mouth disease, cattle - Israel (02): correction 20060220.0560
Foot & mouth disease, cattle - Israel, suspected 20060220.0548
2005
----
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel: OIE 20051228.3691
2004
----
Foot and mouth disease, bovine - Israel 20040511.1271
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (05) 20040417.1061
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (04) 20040130.0352
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel (03) 20040125.0293
Foot & mouth disease, bovine - Israel: confirmed 20040122.0252
Foot & mouth disease, bovines - Israel: suspected 20040120.0221
2001
----
Foot & mouth disease - Israel (West Bank) 20010317.0540
1999
----
Foot & mouth disease - Israel 19990124.0112
1998
----
Foot & mouth disease - Kuwait & Israel 19980722.1384]
..................................................arn/msp/dk

Monday, February 16, 2009

Scients Warn of MC Transmission thru Plasma

Scientists warn of first ever case of human mad cow disease from blood plasma,
Warn 4,000 recipients and predict more cases to come;

By Patrick Hennessy and Laura Donnelly

Scientists fear there could be a second wave of the human variant of mad cow disease, which was caused by cattle being fed the remains of other cattle in the 1980s Photo: EPA
The man was one of thousands of haemophiliacs who received blood plasma transfusions in the years before strict controls were brought in to eliminate the spread of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD).

Until now, scientists had maintained that the 4,000 people who may have received plasma from infected donors were at very low risk of developing the fatal brain disease. Warnings were issued to them as a "highly precautionary measure".

But the Health Protection Agency is expected to announce on Tuesday that an elderly man, who died from other causes, contracted vCJD from plasma.

Although vCJD has been transmitted by blood donations in the past, leading to three deaths, no cases of infection had ever been linked to plasma, which is used to clot blood. Scientists had believed the processing and dilution of the product before it is injected into patients significantly reduced the risks.

BSE expert Professor Hugh Pennington, Emeritus Professor of Bacteriology at Aberdeen University said the findings would have "significant implications" for thousands of people who had been given plasma before the dangers were suspected.

"This looks like pretty grim news for a group of people who have been through fire and water for so long; they have already had increased exposure to hepatitis B and HIV," he said.

Warnings were sent to 4,000 haemophiliacs, and patients suffering from other rare blood conditions in 2004 to warn them that they had had received transfusions from 200 batches of blood products at risk of contamination with vCJD. The plasma was collected from nine people who went on to develop the brain-wasting disease.

All 4,000 were advised not to give blood or donate organs and to warn doctors and dentists that they had been put at risk by the use of plasma.

To date, 164 people have died from vCJD in Britain, with most cases linked to eating meat infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy.

Prof Pennington said details of the way the new link had been detected would be crucial in determining further investigations.

"There is a lot more we still need to know. The fact that this person is elderly, when most of the deaths from vCJD have been young people, and that they died from another cause, is another area for research," he said, suggesting that it might mean that the disease progressed more slowly in some people.

He said restrictions over blood donation, which mean anyone who has had a transfusion cannot donate, and that all plasma is now taken from stocks in the United States, meant the risks to those receiving blood or plasma now were "vanishingly low".

The brain-wasting disease vCJD was first detected in the mid 1990s. Most vCJD patients have been infected after eating BSE contaminated meat. The number of deaths peaked in 2000, when there were 28 deaths. That number has dropped to about five cases a year since 2005.

The epidemic of BSE in the 1980s and 1990s was caused by cattle being fed the remains of other cattle in the form of meat and bone meal, causing an infectious agent to spread.

More than 4 million cattle were slaughtered after almost 200,000 were infected with the fatal neurodegenerative disease.

Scientists recently warned that Britain could see a second wave of the vCJD, affecting as many as 300 people, after discovering that genetic differences can affect how long it takes a person to incubate the disease.


http://livingitfine.blogspot.com/2009/02/scientists-warn-of-first-ever-case-of.html

Blood plasma can give you CJD

sundaymirror.co.uk 15/02/2009

An elderly man has caught the human form of mad cow disease by being given contaminated blood plasma.

Most victims develop the illness - called variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD) - by eating BSE infected meat or being given tainted blood transfusions.

But Government experts will reveal this week that an elderly haemophiliac got incurable vCJD through contaminated plasma, a special form of sterilised blood.

He was not killed by the disease and the vCJD was only found during a postmortem.

More than 160 people have died of vCJD since 1990. There are still about five deaths a year.


http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2009/02/15/plasma-can-give-you-cjd-115875-21125057/

Mad Cow Proposal Worries Farmers / USDA Does Right (for a change) and Farmers Cry "Foul"

My take upon first reading of this article is that the USDA is (finally) taking steps in the right direction to remove certain "suspect" body organs (brains, spinal cords, etc) that are usually rendered into animal protein to be fed-back to cattle (and/or pet foods)--to remove them from the recycling process as this "cannibalistic" practice is known to be a cause of how MC is spead. Farmers cry "hardship" foul! Dont they know that this would be a good thing? Of course not, that is, based on the statements below that indicate the farmers think that MC is not a problem in the USA. Could that be due to our inadequate testing methods? Duh,...let me think. Maybe they (the USDA) dont wanna know.

Mad cow proposal worries farmers
New rule could limit rendering

By Gregory A. Hall • ghall@courier-journal.com • February 15, 2009

FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Some farmers in Kentucky, which has more beef cattle than any other state east of the Mississippi River, are concerned about a proposed federal regulation that would prevent rendering many cow brains and spines into animal food.

Rendering is the cheapest option for disposal of dead cattle. But the federal rule, aimed at preventing the spread of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, would cover many more animals, making rendering more expensive and complicated, farmers said.

Kentucky legislators plan to ask federal officials to delay implementation, which is set for April, through a resolution filed by Rep. Tom McKee, D-Cynthiana and chairman of the House Agriculture and Small Business Committee.

Both the House and Senate agriculture committees have held hearings on the federal regulation this legislative session. Cattle-industry participants argue that the regulation is overkill and will have unintended consequences such as more expensive hauling.

"We really haven't had a BSE issue in this country," Dave Maples, executive vice president of the Kentucky Cattlemen's Association, said in an interview.

One of the remaining options would be burial, but Maples said that the rock under his farm and many others in Central Kentucky means "you just can't do it, so that rendering service is great."

Many of the state's more than 2 million cows would be subject to the rule if they died, he said. The new rule covers all cows 30 months and older.

Composting and landfilling also would be allowed, but with landfilling, "I don't think the public wants that," Maples said.

"Rendering I think is by far the best. It does require a very good pickup system and a collection system," State Veterinarian Robert Stout said during a Senate Agriculture Committee meeting Feb. 5.

Many Kentucky counties have used grants to avoid soil and water problems by sending dead cows to to be rendered at Griffin Industries, based in Cold Spring, Ky. Nation Brothers of Shelbyville is a major hauler of the carcasses.

But whether that removal system can continue is in doubt because of the new regulation, said Marty Griffin, the chief operating officer of the company. Counties pay different fees based on distance, which he said could double under the new rule. The company also takes animals from Indiana and some parts of Tennessee.

Griffin said the company plans to shift the focus of its cattle rendering to fertilizer, instead of meat and bone meal.

If he can't sell enough fertilizer at a sufficient price, the company might drop that part of the business, he said.

"It's how our company got founded, but at the same time the end's got to justify the means," Griffin said.

Even if the system survives, the higher costs brought on by the rule concern regulators like Stout.

Higher costs result in lower compliance, Stout said, which will mean more complaints reaching his office.

"Compliance is dependent on a convenient and inexpensive system of animal disposal and pickup, and I think this rule severely threatens that," Stout said.

It also could impact animal diagnostic laboratories at the University of Kentucky and Murray State University, which rely on the hauling services to pick up the dead animals they examine, Stout said.

UK officials told legislators that the 3,000 or more animal necropsies at its lab each year result in 2.5 million pounds annually of animal flesh.

About 2.1 million pounds of that is rendered at a cost to UK of 4 cents a pound, university officials told legislators, for a total about $84,000. UK incinerates about 400,000 pounds at 50 cents a pound, or about $200,000.

Roger Thomas, director of the Governor's Office of Agricultural Policy, said meetings are planned with the Department of Agriculture to develop a state solution.

"We don't know what a statewide solution will look like," Thomas told the Senate committee.

Reporter Gregory A. Hall can be reached at (502) 582-4087.


http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20090215/BUSINESS/902150320/1003

Friday, February 6, 2009

Canada claims victory in U.S. livestock labelling dispute

Jan 13, 2009

OTTAWA — Ottawa is putting on hold a World Trade Organization complaint on livestock exports after the United States revised labelling regulations that threatened Canadian beef and pork exports.

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said Tuesday the U.S.'s final rule on country-of-origin labelling, called COOL, has given Canadian cattle and pork exporters what they had asked for.

Trade on fresh beef and pork was disrupted last October after Washington put in place rules requiring Canadian livestock to be segregated on U.S. feedlots and clearly tagged that they are free from mad cow disease.

The final regulations still require U.S. livestock to be so labelled, but also allow the option of identifying product as deriving from a combination of U.S. and Canadian livestock.

Ritz said in a conference call from India that the new labelling requirements recognize the industry is integrated and should end discrimination against Canadian imports.

He said the $4-billion Canadian industry had taken a hit during the period, but said export levels and prices should soon return to normal. He did not say how much the industry had lost in the interim.

Ritz said Canada will continue to monitor trade in the sector and ensure no unfair practices continue. In the meantime, Canada will shelve its complaint at the WTO, but not completely withdraw it.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5iOCjhvasMySDCRS6kg7eQdfDWB3Q

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

NAIS Alert!

February 2, 2009

Animal owners, consumers and taxpayers:

NAIS ALERT!

Protect your right to farm and the food supply!

The USDA has proposed a rule to mandate premises registration under the
National Animal Identification System (NAIS) for existing disease control
programs. The draft rule covers programs for cattle, sheep, goats, and swine
but it sets the stage for the entire NAIS program to be mandated for
everyone.
It is critical that the USDA and Congress hear from the hundreds of
thousands of people who will be adversely affected by the NAIS program. This
includes anyone who owns even one livestock animal (including a single
chicken or a horse), as well as consumers who care about local and
sustainable foods, taxpayers who object to wasteful government programs, and
advocates for a safer food system.
STEP 1: Submit comments to USDA online or by mail. The comments must be
received by USDA by March 16, 2009.
You can submit comments online by clicking here. Click on the yellow balloon
under “add comments.”
Or mail two copies of your comments to USDA.
Docket No. APHIS-2007-0096
Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS
Station 3A-03.8
4700 River Road Unit 118
Riverdale, MD 20737-1238
Clearly state that your comments refer to Docket No. APHIS-2007-0096.
(Sample comments are at the end of this alert.)
STEP 2: Send a copy of your comments to your Congressman and Senators.
You can find who represents you, and their contact information by clicking
here
Background
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has been working for over five
years to force a National Animal Identification System (NAIS) onto American
animal owners. NAIS is designed to identify and track each and every
individual livestock and poultry animal owned by family farmers, hobby
farmers, homesteaders, and pet owners across the country.
USDA claims that NAIS is a disease tracking program, but has refused to
provide any support for its claims. In reality, NAIS will:
Usurp states’ existing, well-functioning disease response and brand
inspection programs;
Impose high costs and government surveillance on every farmer and animal
owner for no significant benefits.
NAIS does nothing to improve food safety for consumers or prevent animal
diseases. This program is a one-size-fits-all program developed by and for
big Agribusiness. NAIS will increase consolidation of our food supply in the
hands of a few large companies and put the brakes on the growing movement
toward regional food systems.
Despite promises to the contrary, the USDA’s new proposed rule would make
portions of the NAIS mandatory for thousands of people in every state. This
draft rule would mandate the first step – premises registration – for
anyone who is involved in a federal disease control program. That includes
tuberculosis, brucellosis, scrapie, Johne’s and more. The NAIS Premises
Identification Number (PIN) will become the only form of premises
identification acceptable for official USDA purposes, with no opt-out
provision.
The proposed rule would also limit official Animal Identification Numbers to
the NAIS-compliant 840-numbering system, laying the groundwork for future
regulations that would limit people’s options on the types of tags they
could use.
The proposed rule is not final yet. You can help stop it by visiting the
Federal Registry and making a comment, and click on the yellow balloon under
“add comments.” Be sure to send a copy of your comments to your elected
officials, letting them know how you feel about NAIS.
The grassroots movement has already successfully stalled USDA's plans for
NAIS, which originally called for the entire program - premises registration
animal identification, and tracking - to be mandatory by January 2009. The
proposed rule is an opportunity to get thousands of objections in the formal
record, and have an even greater impact. It is imperative that people speak
up to protect our right to farm and our food supply!
Sample Comments
Docket No. APHIS-2007-0096
Regulatory Analysis and Development PPD, APHIS
Station 3A-03.8
4700 River Road Unit 118
Riverdale, MD 20737-1238
Mail two copies to the address above, or submit comments online by clicking
here.
Date: __________
Re: Docket No. APHIS–2007–0096
I urge the USDA to withdraw its proposed rule to implement portions of the
National Animal Identification System (NAIS), Docket No. APHIS-2007-0096.
I am a __________________________________________________________
(State who you are - farmer, consumer, animal owner - and why this issue
matters to you.)
The proposed rule mandates the NAIS Premises Identification Number (PIN) as
the sole means of identifying properties for official USDA purposes. The
proposed rule also mandates the use of the NAIS numbering system (i.e. the
“840 numbering system”) for eartags using official animal identification
numbers. Tags using other numbering systems would be required to be linked
to a NAIS PIN.
The draft rule is seriously flawed for multiple reasons:
Does not substantiate the alleged benefits to animal health. USDA makes
general claims about the benefits of identifying locations where animals are
kept, but the agency does not address the capacity of existing programs to
meet this purpose, nor how the proposed rule actually improves on the
current ability to identify locations.

Ignores the costs and burdens. The proposed rule would substantially
increase costs, and add intrusive governmental burdens, to the industry and
the taxpayer. The costs include the development and maintenance of a massive
database; the purchase of 840-numbered tags by animal owners; state agencies
having to implement changes to existing programs; and increased federal
government intrusion into the lives and daily activities of farmers and
other animal owners.

Violation of individuals’ religious beliefs. Amish, Mennonite, and some
other individuals have religious objections to the universal numbering
system under NAIS.

Creates disincentives for people to seek veterinary care for their animals
and participate in existing disease control programs. The proposed rule
lists four animal disease programs - tuberculosis, brucellosis, scrapie, and
Johne’s - and will impact others. These programs include provisions for
veterinary care through vaccinations and testing. Animal owners who object
to NAIS, may avoid participating in these programs, thereby increasing
health risks to the public and farm operations.

Adds to the confusion. This rule is the latest in a series of ambiguous and
often contradictory documents that the USDA has issued on NAIS. This has
created enormous confusion over the intent of the USDA and problems for both
animal owners and state agencies.

The proposed rule is a significant step towards implementing the entire NAIS
program. Thus, the agency should address the fundamental question of whether
it should be implementing NAIS at all. In addition to the problems with the
draft rule listed above, there are many additional objectionsto the entire
NAIS propgram:

No significant benefits: USDA’s assertions that NAIS will provide benefits
for animal health are not supported, and actually contradict basic
scientific principles.

High costs for animal owners and taxpayers: These costs include: (1) the
development, maintenance, and update of massive databases; (2) the costs of
tags, most of which will contain microchips; (3) the labor burdens for
tagging every animal; (4) the paperwork burdens of reporting routine
movements; and (5) the costs of enforcement on millions of individuals.

Impracticality: The databases to register the properties, identify each
animal, and record billions of “events” will dwarf any system currently
in existence.

Waste of money: The USDA has already spent over $130 million on NAIS
implementation, but has yet to develop a workable plan for the program.

Diverts resources from more critical needs such as disease testing, disease
prevention through vaccination and improved animal husbandry practices, and
disease detection in currently uninspected livestock imports.

Damage to food safety efforts: NAIS will not prevent foodborne illnesses,
such as e. coli or salmonella contamination, because the tracking ends at
the time of slaughter. Food safety is better served by focusing on programs
such as increased testing for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or
“Mad Cow”), improved oversight of slaughterhouses and food processing
facilities, and increased inspections of imported food. Programs such as
NAIS that burden small, sustainable farmers will hurt efforts to develop
safer, decentralized local food systems.

Discourages involvement in farming or animal husbandry: Because of the costs
and government intrusion, some people will choose not to stay in farming or
go into farming. This will result in less competition, greater reliance in
foreign imports, and poor quality at higher prices.
I urge the USDA to withdraw the proposed rule to implement portions of the
National Animal Identification System, Docket No. APHIS-2007-0096.
Sincerely,
Name: ___________________________
Address: __________________________
City, State Zip: __________________________
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