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Posts Tagged ‘cattle’

South Korea Leads U.S. Meat Exports

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

As of late July, South Korea is the largest growth market for U.S. beef exports. Prior to last week’s reports, Japan and Egypt were the largest U.S. beef markets.

Joel Haggard of the U.S. Meat Export Federation’s Asia Pacific region said the increase is due to a multi-media imaging campaign that began with focus group interviews with Korean consumers.

“A couple of points that came out after talking after talking to a number of consumers and a number of focus groups; we need to abolish the negative image of BSE and the factory farm, we need to show the U.S. industry commitment preferably from the producer,” Haggard told Brownfield AG News.

According to Haggard, the consumers positively responded to the message. “There was receptivity by consumers to a message which was incorporating something like someone like me,” said Haggard. “I’m in the United States. I’m a producer. But, I’m kind of like you. I have a family. I have kids. I care about the safety of the food I eat. These were some of the touch points.”
Haggard said the confidence is back with U.S. beef and more consumer are ready to purchase U.S. products. The campaign is aiming to allow consumers to taste different products and refamiliarize themselves with the product.

Haggard says Korean consumers are more confident in U.S. beef—and much more ready to buy.

May exports in 2010 were three times as large as last year.

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FDA Released Draft of New Livestock Production Guidelines

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

The Food & Drug Administration (FDA) released a draft of the new policy goals for the use of antimicrobials in livestock production. The document may cost meat producers more money and generate more health.

The National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) reported that the document could cause an expensive review of previously approved animal-health products and may even eliminate such preventative measures may even become obsolete.

The draft outlines the FDA’s current thoughts and plans to assure that antimicrobial drugs are used carefully in agriculture. The FDA recognizes the current reason and need to use such drugs, but the agency believes there are other preventative measures that can be used.

According to the draft, the FDA wants antibiotics to be used only when necessary for animal health. The antibiotics should be administered by a veterinary.

Sam Carney, NPPC President, said, “This guidance could eliminate certain antibiotics that are extremely important to the health of animals.” He added, “FDA didn’t present any science on which to base this, yet it could have a tremendous negative impact on animal health and, ultimately, the safety of food. We know that healthy animals produce safe food, and we need every available tool to protect animal health.”

The current draft outlines three basic principles that are considered “crucial” to the FDA:

• Non-therapeutic use of antimicrobials, or sub-therapeutic use for feed efficiency, “is an injudicious use.” The agency goal is to protect antibiotics that important to human health.
• “Medically important antimicrobial drugs” should be limited “to uses in food-producing animals that are considered necessary for assuring animal health and that include veterinary oversight or consultation.”
• Hazards of antimicrobial resistance, including the growing emergence of multiple-drug resistance is “a major public health issue”

The draft will be discussed by various panels of officials from both the agriculture industry and government committees. The guidance does not enforce a law, but the FDA is treating it as it does.

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Russian Imports Help Livestock Sales

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Livestock producers are excited over numbers recorded by the United States Meat Export Federation (USMEF). According to the group imports to Russia have increased from 800 to 1,200 metric tons per week.

“We think this is going to be a good year for exports to Russia,” USMEF Senior Vice President Thad Lively said. These large numbers to Russia have no been seen since 2008, which totaled $95.3 million for the livestock industry.

“This is an area we are very enthusiastic and excited about at this stage in the game,” Lively said. “We track the export sales on a weekly basis and qe’re off to a start this year that could put us on track to equal the export volume we had to Russia in 2008, which was a record year.”

Russia has played an important part in export sales in a variety of meat markets including beef liver and variety meats, but rarely in the beef market as it is now.

“With the exchange rate of the Russian currency to the Brazilian currency, Brazil’s our principal competitor in Russia, (makes the U.S.) very competitive in that market,” Lively said.

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The Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment has Reached Congress

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Last week legislation was introduced to Congress that would prevent farmers and livestock producers from giving healthy farm animals antibiotics. Currently it is legal to feed healthy animals antibiotics to increase growth in a quicker time. It also prevents animals from contracting diseases that come from overcrowding in their housing.

The concern may seem insignificant, but the 50-year-old practice is dangerous to the animals, environment and humans. Steve Ells at the Huffington Post pointed out a particular situation with Russ Kremer, president of the Missouri Farmers Union.

“Kremer… who might have died from being gored in the knee cap by the tusk of a boar that had been fed a steady diet of penicillin to ward off strep. The infection that Russ contracted didn’t respond to the penicillin his doctor first prescribed, nor to the tetracycline, amoxicillin, or erythromycin that came after. Russ was lucky that a new generation of antibiotics existed at the time that kept him alive and, in his words, “woke him up to the fact that there’s something wrong with our food system.”

Despite our high demand for meat, the practice is highly dangerous and many are concerned about our well-being after consuming this meat. 17.8 to 24.6 million pounds of meat a year are grown with antibiotics.

If the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment passes this practice may become absolete. It is going to cause a huge stir amongst many livestock producers.

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Farm Act Fails in Senate

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Many new policies and bills are going into affect with new administration. One current bump in the road includes a bill that prohibits any state agency from requiring farmers or ranchers to register farm animals. The bill opposing “The Freedom to Farm Act” passed on Feb. 11 did not gain enough support in the Senate committee.

The opposing bill was sponsored by Rep. Roy Ragland (R.). The bill is in response to the Department of Agriculture’s National Animal Identification System implemented after the mad-cow disease epidemic in 2003.

“It’s just going to be like a giant IRS keeping up with every animal,” Ragland said.

“The bill would prevent the state of Arkansa from implementing the national animal ID system in advance of any federal moves and also send a strong message to the USDA that the farmers in the state of Arkansas do not want this burden weighing on their shoulders,” he said.

The government’s intentions are not to put a burden on anyone. The idea behind the identification program is to have the ability to track illness back to its origin quickly and prevent further outbreaks.

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