Thu, July 15, 2004
Beef industry to go it alone
Province, packers vow to ramp up processing capacity to end-run border ban
By PABLO FERNANDEZ, CALGARY SUN
Alberta is a key player in a made-in-Canada solution to the mad cow crisis that will see all domestic beef processed within the nation's borders. The plan means Canada won't have to rely on the U.S. lifting its ban on live cattle and will spell the end to the BSE crisis suffocating the country's beef industry by 2006, ranchers and provincial officials said yesterday.
That announcement, which Alberta Agriculture Minister Shirley McClellan endorsed, came following a meeting at the Calgary Stampede of international agriculture officials.
Ted Haney, president of the Canada Beef Export Federation, said the industry will be self-sufficient in two years, making the opening of the U.S. border to live cattle a moot point.
"That will bring an end to this crisis all on itself," said Haney. "We just need to ensure that we still have an industry by 2006."
McClellan said cattle-processing independence is a provincial priority.
"We recognize now that ... we should never have let (processing capacity) go like that," she said. "Nothing should leave this province that isn't in a box."
McClellan said the government will ensure the province has the capacity to process all of its beef and will not put that priority on the back burner even if the U.S. border opens in the near future.
Haney, who returned to Calgary from Ottawa just before yesterday's gathering, said the country is less than two years away from having the built-in ability to process all its cattle, resulting in the ability to process five million cows a year.
Haney said recent data indicates that Canada will be able to process 4-million head of cattle within the year and up to five million the following year.
Overall, there is a high demand for Canadian beef abroad, he said.
But a large portion of Canadian cows can't be processed locally and can't be exported live to be processed elsewhere because of international BSE restrictions, which means that even though a significant number of cattle are ready for slaughter, they're sitting idle and not generating revenue because they can't be processed.
"We need to be able to have the capacity to process 105 percent of all Canadian cattle," he said.
Beef industry to go it alone
Province, packers vow to ramp up processing capacity to end-run border ban
By PABLO FERNANDEZ, CALGARY SUN
Alberta is a key player in a made-in-Canada solution to the mad cow crisis that will see all domestic beef processed within the nation's borders. The plan means Canada won't have to rely on the U.S. lifting its ban on live cattle and will spell the end to the BSE crisis suffocating the country's beef industry by 2006, ranchers and provincial officials said yesterday.
That announcement, which Alberta Agriculture Minister Shirley McClellan endorsed, came following a meeting at the Calgary Stampede of international agriculture officials.
Ted Haney, president of the Canada Beef Export Federation, said the industry will be self-sufficient in two years, making the opening of the U.S. border to live cattle a moot point.
"That will bring an end to this crisis all on itself," said Haney. "We just need to ensure that we still have an industry by 2006."
McClellan said cattle-processing independence is a provincial priority.
"We recognize now that ... we should never have let (processing capacity) go like that," she said. "Nothing should leave this province that isn't in a box."
McClellan said the government will ensure the province has the capacity to process all of its beef and will not put that priority on the back burner even if the U.S. border opens in the near future.
Haney, who returned to Calgary from Ottawa just before yesterday's gathering, said the country is less than two years away from having the built-in ability to process all its cattle, resulting in the ability to process five million cows a year.
Haney said recent data indicates that Canada will be able to process 4-million head of cattle within the year and up to five million the following year.
Overall, there is a high demand for Canadian beef abroad, he said.
But a large portion of Canadian cows can't be processed locally and can't be exported live to be processed elsewhere because of international BSE restrictions, which means that even though a significant number of cattle are ready for slaughter, they're sitting idle and not generating revenue because they can't be processed.
"We need to be able to have the capacity to process 105 percent of all Canadian cattle," he said.
Comment