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Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development

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Presentation on theme: "Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development"— Presentation transcript:

1 Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development
Foreign Animal Disease Eradication Support, Contingency Plan & Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development 2003

2 Introduction Importance of Planning Impact of FMD FADES Plan
Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal Municipal Responsibilities Summary Take Home Message

3 RISK!!! Recent outbreaks of:
Recent outbreaks of: Foot-and-mouth Disease (FMD) Classical Swine Fever Newcastle Disease (Poultry) Rapid & frequent movement of people & goods Bioterrorism

4 Livestock Statistics Animal #’s % of Cdn Total Date Source Poultry
2001 Statistics Canada Beef & Dairy Cattle 41.4 July 1, 2002 Pig 14.4 October 1, 2002 Sheep 23 PMU Horses 7 500 2002 AAFRD Cervids 53 748 ~ 50 TOTAL

5 Canadian Agriculture Economics (2001)
Livestock--$$$ Canadian Agriculture Economics (2001) Beef exports………$ 2.2 billion (Can Fax) Pork exports………$ 2.2 billion (Can. Pork Council) Dairy exports…….$ 443 million (Stats Can)

6 Tripartite FMD Simulation
Day One

7 Tripartite FMD Simulation
Days Three to Five

8 Tripartite FMD Simulation
1214 confirmed sites 697,197 animals Day 40

9 FMD in Great Britain (2001) 2 030 confirmed farms
over 4 million carcasses disposed of

10 FMD Economic Impact Study (CAHC)
Minimum, or ‘fixed cost’ of… $13.7 Billion the ‘unlikely ideal’ More likely cost of… $25 Billion

11 FMD Economic Impact Study (CAHC)
Potential costs in excess of $45 Billion… in a major livestock production area and with ‘less effective’ strategies million head of livestock lost, primarily for welfare purposes 10 months to regain OIE disease-free status (shorter with US) 4 - 6 years to regain market share Public perception

12 FADES Plan Signatories
Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development (AAFRD) Emergency Management Alberta (EMA) Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) Office of Critical Infrastructure Protection and Emergency Preparedness (OCIPEP)

13 FADES Plan Purpose… To identify which organizations and what resources will assist the CFIA in the eradication of a foreign animal disease outbreak in Alberta.

14 FADES Plan Prevention Period Potential Risk Period (Action Level 1)
FADES Response Periods: Prevention Period Potential Risk Period (Action Level 1) Confirmation of Disease (Action Level 2) Recovery Period

15 FADES Plan Provincial Support
Alberta provincial government departments Alberta municipal government departments Animal health and welfare stakeholders Livestock industry organizations

16 FADES Plan Areas of Provincial Support FAD Prevention
Economic Impact and Compensation Diagnosis, Traceback and Epidemiology Eradication, Destruction, Disposal, Cleaning and Disinfection Movement Control Communication and Public Information Public Health and Food Supply Geographical Information Systems (GIS) and Database Management

17 FADES Plan AAFRD is currently developing a departmental contingency plan Target completion date: June 2003 Exercise to test the plan: Fall 2003

18 Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal
Reasons for Mass Livestock Mortalities: fires flood natural disaster extreme weather poisoning foreign animal disease bioterrorism

19 Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal
developed by a Carcass Disposal Committee of government and industry representatives preceded by Alberta’s FADES plan generic plan for all livestock species

20 Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal
Disposal Options Rendering Become overwhelmed Burial Large number of cattle & hogs Incineration Composting May be used for chickens

21 Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal
Producer’s Responsibility: Environmentally suitable land Destruction and Disposal of Dead Animals Regulations* Fact Sheet circulated through industry organizations Foreign animal disease = CFIA leader *

22 Municipal Responsibilities
Preparedness for FAD outbreak included in municipal emergency plans

23 Potential Municipal Responsibilities for FADS
May provide representatives at CFIA’s District Emergency Site Operations Centres (DESOC) May advise on local facilities suitable for DESOCs AAMD & C may provide a representative at the CFIA field operation centre (FOC) Advise CFIA on local resources available to support eradication operations

24 Potential Municipal Responsibilities for FADS
Provide essential services to residents of infected premises or relocated persons May provide assistance in tracing animal movements May provide assistance for disposal, cleaning and disinfecting May declare a state of emergency

25 Potential Municipal Responsibilities for Mass Carcass Disposal
Determine suitable sites for carcass disposal for farmers who are unable to bury on their own farm Identify heavy equipment that may be available for disposal operations

26 Mass Farm Animal Carcass Disposal
Pre-selection of Disposal Sites Why? Strategic locations Private vs Public Land Land required Site maintenance & Monitoring Destruction & Disposal of Dead Animals Regulation (Livestock Diseases Act) ‘Pre-selecting Mass Carcass Disposal Sites’ Fact Sheet:

27 Summary We are at risk!! FADES Plan Mass Carcass Disposal Plan
Municipal Responsibilities

28 Take Home Message Municipalities must include FAD and carcass disposal in emergency planning

29 Any Questions?? For further information contact: Dr. Gerald Ollis
Chief Provincial Veterinarian ‘Pre-selecting Mass Carcass Disposal Sites’ Fact Sheet:


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