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BSE Merry-Go-Round Is Greased, Stoked And Whirling

Manitoba_Rancher

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BSE Merry-Go-Round Is Greased, Stoked And Whirling



Joe Roybal

OUR PERSPECTIVE

COW-CALF WEEKLY

A Prism Business Media Property

March 17, 2006

Beef Magazine



Relatively speaking, the announcement this week of a third case of BSE

in the U.S. seems to have passed with little more than a yawn, at least

where the media was concerned. On the evening of the March 13 BSE

confirmation announcement by USDA, I tried to tune into the major

networks' evening news shows. Neither ABC, NBC, CBS or Fox News led off

with the story. In fact, "NBC News with Brian Williams" finally made a

very brief -- less than 10 seconds -- mention of the story about 15-20

minutes into the broadcast.



Meanwhile, Reuters reported that, among the New York Times, Washington

Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, USA Today and Wall Street

Journal (WSJ), only WSJ gave the BSE story front-page treatment.



Even R-CALF, which not long ago was canoodling with anti-meat "consumer"

groups to alert Americans to the Biblical-style plague if Canadian beef

were allowed into the U.S., sent out a statesmen-like news release

stressing the safety of the U.S. beef supply.
:roll: :roll:


Still, there were calls in Congress for action on downer animals, a

heightened feed ban and more urgency on a mandatory livestock ID system.



To be sure, the news earlier this week of a third case of BSE in the

U.S. made for some high anxiety among those hoping and working for the

reopening of important Pacific Rim markets still off-limits to U.S. beef

exports. The big one, of course, is Japan, which re-shuttered its market

to U.S. beef after just a month, following the discovery in Tokyo of

attached vertebrae in a U.S. shipment of veal.



Meanwhile, the taffy pulling continues with South Korea, which has

agreed to reopen its market to boneless U.S. beef from animals 30 months

of age or less. The final steps of that agreement are in process, with

the first shipments anticipated to arrive in April.



The question on everyone's mind is: "How will this latest BSE episode

affect all these negotiations?"



The U.S. further sneezed into the soup when Hong Kong inspectors found

bone shards last Friday in a shipment of boneless beef products from a

Swift Beef Co. plant in Colorado. Hong Kong had partially lifted its

two-year ban on imports of U.S. beef in December, with the stipulation

only boneless beef from cattle less than 30 months old is allowed for

export. Hong Kong has barred the Greeley plant from further exports.



The Hong Kong news served to stoke up concern among some Japanese

consumers because the Swift plant was among the 11 U.S. plants toured

and approved by a Japanese inspection team in mid December.



Incidentally, Japan confirmed its 23rd and 24th case of domestic BSE.

The latest case, confirmed today, was the first case in a beef animal in

Japan. All others being dairy cows.



Then to top it off came more news this week that USDA planned to

continue with its planned scaling back of its expanded surveillance

program for BSE. Though those close to the issue realize the program was

always intended to be temporary, the timing of the story -- coming on

the heels of a newly discovered case -- seemed to others as more

evidence of USDA's detachment from reality on the whole BSE issue.



Taken together, these incidents not only had a lot of folks questioning

the U.S. commitment to, and USDA's oversight of, living up to the

agreed-upon protocols, it had a lot of folks, particularly in the U.S.

beef industry, flummoxed, flabbergasted and furious. And rightly so.
 
And amazingly enough,,,, retail prices stay strong while producers see lower prices for fed cattle? Kinda like a miny version of the captive supply salmon run that Canada has been experiencing since May 2003.

How much longer can those who gain from BSEconomics milk this cow?
 

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