A
study assessing the impact of traceability and animal identification
programs on the international market for red meat has been released by
the U.S. Meat Export Federation (USMEF).
Conducted by
researchers at Kansas State University, Colorado State University and
Montana State University, the study assesses the potential impact on
U.S. producers and processors of evolving thinking about animal ID and
traceability in leading export markets and traceability systems that
have already been put in place by other major beef and pork exporting
countries.
The study – “Economic Assessment of Evolving Red Meat
Export Market Access Requirements for Traceability of Livestock and
Meat” – points out that the United States and India are the only two
major beef exporters that do not already have mandatory traceability
systems. Argentina, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Uruguay
all have animal identification/traceability programs in place.
In
addition to the traceability systems of exporting nations, the report,
which was commissioned by USMEF on a contract awarded based on a request
for proposal, provides an analysis of the domestic cattle traceability
systems employed by selected major importers of U.S. beef. Of special
note, Japan and Korea, among the highest value markets for U.S. red meat
exports, have adopted mandatory traceability programs which could
eventually lead to similar requirements being applied to imports.
Finally,
the report compares the sanitary and phytosanitary restrictions imposed
on the major beef exporters by the top importing countries. For some
exporting nations, such as Australia and New Zealand, there are no
restrictions imposed by trading partners. Brazil and Argentina face FMD
(foot and mouth disease)-related restrictions and traceability systems
are critical for exports from these South American countries which are
not entirely free of FMD.
The United States faces BSE-related
product and age restrictions from a number of major importing countries
(Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Russia and Mexico) as well as
restrictions from the European Union based on hormone use. In addition,
China’s beef market remains closed to imports from the United States due
to BSE-related restrictions.
The report notes that competing
beef exporting nations are using their industries’ mandatory
traceability systems as marketing tools to enhance their sales and as a
point of differentiation with the U.S. industry.
While market
access and producer profitability have been important factors in
exporting countries’ decisions to establish traceability systems, the
report concludes that animal health management and food safety are the
primary drivers behind most countries’ decisions to build animal ID and
traceability into the regulatory frameworks for their livestock
industries. Improved supply chain coordination and enhanced producer
management opportunities are secondary motivators.
*source Drovers
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