mad cow disease in canada,sends economic shock waves across n. america

AR182

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 9, 2000
18,654
87
0
Scottsdale,AZ
Canada Sends Shock Wave with Mad Cow Case


Tuesday, May 20, 2003; 2:48 PM

Reuters

By Jeffrey Jones

CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Canada reported its first case of mad cow disease in a decade on Tuesday, a potentially devastating revelation for the country's huge beef industry just weeks after its economy was damaged by the SARS threat.

A cow in Alberta, Canada's top cattle-producing province, tested positive for brain-wasting bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease, in a test taken after it was slaughtered last winter, officials said.

"It was (detected) just a few days ago. The actual test was taken Jan. 31 from a cow in Fairview, Alberta," an official with the Canadian Beef Export Federation said. "It's just one isolated case of an eight-year-old cow."

Canada's only other case was in 1993, but the animal was imported from Britain, where the disease caused a crisis and sparked a U.S. ban on British beef imports. Its carcass was destroyed, as was its herd.

The animal with the latest case "did not enter the food chain" and its northern Alberta herd will be slaughtered, as will any other found to be affected, Canadian Agriculture Minister Lyle Vanclief told a nationally televised news conference in the Alberta capital of Edmonton.

Still, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman quickly slapped a temporary ban on beef imports from Canada because of the case.

Alberta, where cattle ranching is ingrained in the culture, accounts for nearly 60 percent of Canada's beef production, providing C$3.8 billion ($2.8 million) in annual farm cash receipts.

Last year, more than half a million live cattle were shipped to the United States, according to Alberta agriculture department statistics.

The mad cow news sent shock waves across the North American economy.

Shares of Tyson Foods Inc. , the biggest U.S. beef processor, and fast-food giant McDonald's Co. fell sharply. McDonald's stock slumped 5 percent and was the top loser in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Tuesday.

The Canadian dollar, which has been soaring in recent weeks, also skidded.

"It still remains to be seen how serious it is but the news is not good for Canada, without a doubt," said a currency trader at a major Canadian bank. "We're trading off the headlines."

In April, Canada's economy was hit by fears over flu-like severe acute respiratory syndrome, especially in Toronto, where trade and tourism sputtered. Canada recently declared victory in the battle against SARS, but not before it killed 24 people in the Toronto area.

Some experts believe mad cow disease may have been spread by cows in Britain who were fed the remains of sheep contaminated with scrapie. Other scientists say the disease arose from a mutation in a cow in the 1970s.

So far more than 80 people in Britain and Europe have died from the human variation of mad cow, called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
We will get by. We don't need any beef from there. We have so much now we don't know what to do with it.
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
I guess thats possiable. Naw cant be. But if it's a she you never know. :D
 

AR182

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 9, 2000
18,654
87
0
Scottsdale,AZ
i just heard that canada exports about 1.7 million head of cattle per year to the us. that's surprises me because i always thought that the beef came from within our country.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top