| WASHINGTON, Dec.
29, 2004: The U.S. Department of Agriculture
today announced that after conducting an extensive risk
review it is establishing conditions under which it will
allow imports of live cattle under 30 months of age and
certain other commodities from regions with effective
bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) prevention and
detection measures.
This final rule ensures the continued protection of
public and animal health from BSE, while removing prohibitions
on the importation of certain animals and commodities
from minimal-risk regions. Prior to being able to import
to the United States, each country must undergo a thorough
risk assessment.
"We are committed to ensuring that our regulatory
approach keeps pace with the body of scientific knowledge
about BSE," said Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman.
"After conducting an extensive review, we are confident
that imports of certain commodities from regions of
minimal risk can occur with virtually no risk to human
or animal health. Our approach is consistent with guidelines
established by the World Organization for Animal Health,
or OIE, and relies on appropriate, science- based risk
mitigation measures."
OIE recommendations, which are based on the latest
science, provide guidelines for trade in cattle of any
age, as well as beef and many other cattle products,
even from countries that are considered to be at high
risk for BSE as long as appropriate mitigation measures
are applied to protect both human and animal health.
Canada will be the first country recognized as a minimal-risk
region and, as such, will be eligible to export to the
United States live cattle under the age of 30 months,
as well as certain other animals and products. Live
cattle imported from Canada under this rule, which is
over 500 pages, will be subject to restrictions designed
to ensure that they are slaughtered by the time they
reach 30 months of age. These include permanent marking
of the animals as to their origin, requiring them to
move in sealed containers to a feedlot or to slaughter,
and not allowing them to move to more than one feedlot
while in the United States.
USDA is confident that the animal and public health
measures that Canada has in place to prevent BSE, combined
with existing U.S. domestic safeguards and additional
safeguards provided in the final rule provide the utmost
protections to U.S. consumers and livestock. When Canadian
ruminants and ruminant products are presented for importation
into the United States, they become subject to domestic
safeguards as well. Beef imports that have already undergone
Canadian inspection are also subject to re- inspection
at ports of entry by the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS) to ensure only eligible products are
imported.
USDA conducted a thorough risk analysis for certain
types of Canadian ruminants and ruminant products introducing
BSE into the United States. This risk analysis included
careful consideration of the risk mitigation measures
Canada has in place to detect and prevent BSE in Canadian
cattle and also the risk mitigation measures imposed
in this final rule.
USDA has concluded that Canada meets the requirements
for a minimal-risk region. The minimal-risk standards
that Canada has met include among others:
- Prohibition of specified risk materials in human
food.
- Import restrictions sufficient to minimize exposure
to BSE: Since 1990, Canada has maintained stringent
import restrictions, preventing the entry of live
ruminants and ruminant products, including rendered
protein products, from countries that have found BSE
in native cattle or that are considered to be at significant
risk for BSE.
- Surveillance for BSE at levels that meet or exceed
international guidelines: Canada has conducted active
surveillance for BSE since 1992 and exceeded the level
recommended in international guidelines for at least
the past seven years.
- Ruminant-to-ruminant feed ban in place and effectively
enforced: Canada has had a ban on the feeding of ruminant
proteins to ruminants since August 1997, with compliance
monitored through routine inspections.
- Appropriate epidemiological investigations, risk
assessment, and risk mitigation measures imposed as
necessary: Canada has conducted extensive investigations
in response to any BSE finding and has taken additional
risk mitigation measures in response.
- The rule also outlines conditions under which sheep,
goats, cervids and camelids can be imported, as well
as meat and certain other products and byproducts
from these animals.
USDA first proposed changes to its regulations regarding
establishing minimal-risk regions and conditions for
safely importing live ruminants and ruminant products
from such regions on Nov. 4, 2003, and the comment period
was still under way when the United States announced
its first case of BSE on December 23, 2003, in a cow
imported from Canada. To allow additional time for commenters
to evaluate the proposal in the context of the first
U.S. finding of the disease, USDA reopened the comment
period and accepted comments until April 7, 2004. The
final rule will be published in the Jan. 4, 2005 Federal
Register and will be effective March 7, 2005.
Other countries or regions that meet the minimal-risk
conditions will be considered in the future. The designation
of any future countries as minimal-risk regions will
be accomplished through rulemaking procedures following
completion of an appropriate risk assessment.
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