I note the Americans are sending a team to Canada to verify our ruminant ban. I can’t help thinking we should be sending a team down there to verify their BSE testing. Given the level of trade in live cattle including breeding cattle and dairy cattle between Canada and the U.S over the last 20 years since BSE came a problem in the UK it is absolutely beyond belief that the U.S. has not found a single case of BSE that they are willing to call their own.
Canada and the U.S. were completely harmonized in their respective BSE strategies from the very beginning. If we consider the size of the U.S. cow herd versus the Canadian cow herd a reasonable person would expect that the U.S. should have had at least 32-40 BSE positives if Canada has 3 not to mention the Washington Holstein and its questionable Canadian citizenship.
It is extremely unlikely that there is any significant difference between the prevalence of BSE in Canada when compared to the U.S. However it seems to me that Canada and the U.S. are not harmonized in one aspect of their BSE strategies and that aspect would be a different attitude toward BSE testing in the U.S.
Canada and the U.S. were completely harmonized in their respective BSE strategies from the very beginning. If we consider the size of the U.S. cow herd versus the Canadian cow herd a reasonable person would expect that the U.S. should have had at least 32-40 BSE positives if Canada has 3 not to mention the Washington Holstein and its questionable Canadian citizenship.
It is extremely unlikely that there is any significant difference between the prevalence of BSE in Canada when compared to the U.S. However it seems to me that Canada and the U.S. are not harmonized in one aspect of their BSE strategies and that aspect would be a different attitude toward BSE testing in the U.S.
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