(Attribute statement to AMI
President and CEO J. Patrick Boyle)
We
agree with the review team’s commendable focus
on harmonization of trading rules governing
beef products from countries with a low risk of
BSE. As the report released today stated:
"Exporting countries feel significant national
social and financial impacts when importing
countries fail to comply with international
rules regarding trade."
Clearly, the
OIE’s scientific guidelines regarding trade in
beef products should be the blueprint for how
trading partners respond to countries that
confirm a single case of BSE. As the report
recommended, "The United Sates should
demonstrate leadership in trade matters by
adopting import/export policy in accordance
with international standards, and thus
encourage the discontinuation of irrational
trade barriers when countries identify their
first case of BSE."
We agree with and
support such an objective.
Several
other key recommendations made by the review
team also mirror what the science dictates
regarding an appropriate BSE regulatory
response. For example, the report noted the
difficulties in tracing the BSE index animal’s
"birth cohort" and confirmed what USDA
officials have also prioritized: The urgent
need to develop and implement a national
individual animal identification system, an
initiative AMI supports and will continue to
encourage.
Likewise, we agree with the
objective of preventing contaminated feed from
being fed to cattle. However, additional
measures to further regulate the uses of
ruminant-derived protein must proceed from a
thorough and scientifically justified risk
assessment. Science needs to validate changes
to our current and quite comprehensive
ruminant-to-ruminant feed ban -- not
expressions of concern over cross-contamination
based on the experience of various European
countries that were unable to enforce similar
feed bans in their countries.
In
summary, the key objectives underlined by the
international review team are ones that AMI
strongly supports: Harmonization of beef
trading rules, according to the best
science-based guidance, and "close
collaboration among all appropriate agencies in
North America" to optimally manage the BSE
situation the beef industry has
encountered.
We agree with the
imperative of a "shared commitment on the part
of national and state governments, producers,
consumers and private industry," as the report
recommended. Most importantly, we remain
confident in the ability of BSE policies "that
are developed and implemented in a consistent,
scientifically valid manner," as the review
team characterized them, to protect animal
health and fully maintain the safety of U.S.
beef products, both domestically and
globally.
AMI Statement: On the International Review Team's Report On BSE in the United States
Wednesday, February 4, 2004
For more information
contact:
|
Janet Riley Senior VP, Public Affairs 703-841-3635 jriley@meatami.com |
Dan Murphy Vice President, Public Affairs 703-841-3624 dmurphy@meatami.com |
