You are right. It is crucial that organizations representing cattle producers listen to those producers. The challenge is producers are saying different things at the same time.
During the BSE crisis everyone wanted action, everyone wanted the problem fixed and no one was in a position to wait very long for solutions. Producers were saying our cattle industry should do a lot of things, from we should have supply management, portable slaughter plants or government funded packing plants, BSE testing of course, burning cows in stockpiles, never ship beef to the U.S. again and take over beef exports to Japan.
All of those suggestions had some validity but the common thread was live cattle prices had to improve. During BSE our cattle organizations and government too worked together in what I would say was an unprecedented manner to basically save our industry from disaster. By September 2003 boxed beef trade had resumed with the U.S. and in January 2005 Rule 1 was announced that saw live cattle trade resume across the 49th parallel. In 2007 Rule 2 was announced and now we can ship cows and cow beef to the U.S. All during this period trade did resume with overseas markets with limited trade to Japan.
Live cattle prices did recover but not to the level they were prior to 2003. Some of that may be due to the lingering effects of BSE, especially the costs of SRM removal, but we cannot overlook the change in the Canadian dollar and the effects of stronger grain prices driven by subsidized ethanol production.
A course of action was taken with positive results. Given the multitude of directions producers wanted the cattle industry to take, it was impossible to do everything that everyone wanted and it will never be possible to please everyone all the time. Yes there were calls from some producers for BSE testing but there were calls for a lot of other things too.
In the midst of it all Canada did a great job of keeping the confidence of our domestic beef consumer who always was and remains today our number one customer. And live cattle and beef trade resumed with the United States which is the world's number one importer of beef and the market which Canada has special NAFTA access to. If we did not have that live cattle trade with the U.S. today weaned calf prices would be lower than they were during the worst of the BSE crisis.
Decisions had to be made but that does not mean industry was not listening to cattle producers.
During the BSE crisis everyone wanted action, everyone wanted the problem fixed and no one was in a position to wait very long for solutions. Producers were saying our cattle industry should do a lot of things, from we should have supply management, portable slaughter plants or government funded packing plants, BSE testing of course, burning cows in stockpiles, never ship beef to the U.S. again and take over beef exports to Japan.
All of those suggestions had some validity but the common thread was live cattle prices had to improve. During BSE our cattle organizations and government too worked together in what I would say was an unprecedented manner to basically save our industry from disaster. By September 2003 boxed beef trade had resumed with the U.S. and in January 2005 Rule 1 was announced that saw live cattle trade resume across the 49th parallel. In 2007 Rule 2 was announced and now we can ship cows and cow beef to the U.S. All during this period trade did resume with overseas markets with limited trade to Japan.
Live cattle prices did recover but not to the level they were prior to 2003. Some of that may be due to the lingering effects of BSE, especially the costs of SRM removal, but we cannot overlook the change in the Canadian dollar and the effects of stronger grain prices driven by subsidized ethanol production.
A course of action was taken with positive results. Given the multitude of directions producers wanted the cattle industry to take, it was impossible to do everything that everyone wanted and it will never be possible to please everyone all the time. Yes there were calls from some producers for BSE testing but there were calls for a lot of other things too.
In the midst of it all Canada did a great job of keeping the confidence of our domestic beef consumer who always was and remains today our number one customer. And live cattle and beef trade resumed with the United States which is the world's number one importer of beef and the market which Canada has special NAFTA access to. If we did not have that live cattle trade with the U.S. today weaned calf prices would be lower than they were during the worst of the BSE crisis.
Decisions had to be made but that does not mean industry was not listening to cattle producers.
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