Thank you, Mr. Chair and honourable members. It's great to be here tonight.
My name is Matt Bowman, and I appreciate the opportunity to come today to represent the Canadian Cattle Association and our 60,000 beef producers across the country. I am the co-chair of the animal health and care committee, along with Mr. Miles Wowk from Alberta. I am also joined today virtually by Dr. Leigh Rosengren, our chief veterinary officer.
Let me start by emphasizing the animal health and care essential to our daily work as cattle producers. Our sustainability depends on the health of our herd. We have world-class high standards presently in place and are striving for continual improvement. Ensuring animal health means protecting the animals from day-to-day diseases while preparing for emergencies, disasters and foreign animal diseases.
Given the study before the committee, my remarks will focus on the activities and priorities of the beef industry, targeted at improving preparedness for foot-and-mouth disease, and there are three reasons for this.
First of all, FMD is among the most contagious viruses for cattle in the world.
Second, FMD affects all cloven hoof species, so we work closely with our other commodity partners to ensure that our preparedness can be as effective as possible.
Finally, FMD is present in 70% of the world's livestock, so an incursion is a real threat to Canadian production. Any detection of FMD would result in complete and full border closure to all international trade of live animals and meat products until Canada could eliminate the disease and regain its FMD-free status.
The beef sector has invested heavily in FMD preparedness, including surveillance, traceability and biosecurity. With respect to traceability, the beef sector identifies all cattle with an individual animal identification number. This allows traceability of the animals throughout their life in Canada. CFIA currently has an open consultation on its traceability regulations, and CCA is actively preparing its comments on those regulations.
Biosecurity includes all practices that prevent or mitigate disease from entering, spreading within, or being released from a farm or ranch. As FMD is a reportable disease, the activities of the Canada Border Services Agency and our import permit procedures are critical in ensuring that FMD does not enter Canada from other countries.
Farm and ranch level biosecurity looks different in the beef industry than in other livestock sectors. Other commodities have indoor production that provides the opportunity for layers of biosecurity at the farm gate or at the barn door. Many cattle operations have neither of these, so our processes look much different; however, we have a robust system that is delivered through the verified beef production plus program. VBP+ is a voluntary industry and producer-led initiative to proactively mitigate risk through producer training and certification. Training encompasses producer preparedness and documentation requirements to validate implementation. The third party certification verifies practices in place and confirms documentation completion.
In addition, the Beef Cattle Research Council is central to ensuring that recommended best practices are science based and clearly communicated to the industry.
These initiatives cost the beef industry stakeholders over $12.4 million to achieve. Our sector has estimated an additional $15.9 million in initial investment and $2.3 million in ongoing costs associated with the pending traceability recommendations.
The beef sector's ongoing investment to prevent disease incursion and spread demonstrates our commitment to emergency preparedness. It provides an excellent basis for the government to leverage investment in foreign animal disease prevention and response.
We all have a role to play in biosecurity, and I must point out the unintended consequences of CFIA's transport regulations that came into effect in 2022. We are concerned that they are creating more of a biosecurity risk, and I will be more than happy to elaborate more on this in the Q and A session.
Given the importance of today's discussion, I must close by thanking the government for its investment in budget 2023 for the FMD vaccine bank. This is a critical component of our preparedness plan, and we are anxious to see it established, with robust plans for its deployment, if necessary.
We look forward to continuing to work with federal and provincial governments along with other industries, including Animal Health Canada, on our various roles and responsibilities to adequately prepare for a foreign disease outbreak.
We recognize the link between animal health, human health and mental health, and we are taking a one-health, one-welfare approach to biosecurity.
This is evergreen work for our sector as we continually develop and improve our repertoire of risk management and preventative practices that provide a foundation for healthy herds, healthy producers and healthy balance sheets.
We look forward to more discussion today.
Thank you.