22/08/07
Farmers have done their part in keeping the FMD spread limited
to the area immediately around the Institute of Animal Health at
Pirbright in Surrey – and now government must make sure there
are no more expensive virus leaks from the establishment.
This is the view of the National Beef Association which is aware
of previous virus escapes from the Pirbright centre and the collective
decision of other EU governments to shut down virus manufacturing
premises in their countries because the risk of security breakdowns,
particularly in the case of FMD, is simply too great.
“The relief within government and industry that the internally generated
FMD scare appears to have been contained must not be allowed to cloud the serious
issues surrounding the very real danger of future virus escapes with even more
damaging consequences,” explained NBA director, Kim Haywood.
“Even if the national movement restriction strait-jacket is removed by
around September 10th, as is hoped, and both the auction system and inter-EU
export markets are completely restored within the next three weeks, the measures
taken to counter the avoidable leak at Pirbright have been an extremely expensive
national exercise and the cost to livestock farmers, haulers, auction markets,
meat processors and government has to be well over £100 million through
additional direct expense and loss of income.”
“Circumstances, on this occasion, have favoured the relatively easy confinement
of the outbreak but there is no guarantee this will happen again if there is
yet another leak so government must not sit back and congratulate itself on avoiding
a complete disaster and instead address the more difficult task of making sure
similar escapes cannot happen again.”
According to the NBA this means a thorough examination of whether it is right
to continue to manufacture FMD virus on the Pirbright site – and if it
is whether it is possible to do so without any risk of disastrous spillage.
“Whatever the outcome of a review on developments at the Institute of Animal
Health it is abundantly clear that government must either decide, as others in
the EU already have done, that it can no longer risk FMD virus manufacture in
a livestock producing country that is so dependent on export markets or throw
a mountain of money at making sure the premises are escape proof,” said
Ms Haywood.
“The former may prove the easiest course because government in general
appears to prefer minimalist, even threadbare, financial support for equally
important issues like efficient flood defence and it is abundantly clear that
if Pirbright really is to be made leak proof it will have to divert substantially
more money into Defra, and its animal disease containment strategies, at a time
when it clearly prefers to take the opposite tack and pursue consistent and regular
financial cuts in Defra instead.”
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