22-02-2009 00:12 AM | News

Netherlands-Salmonella.

HOLLAND-SALMONELLA.

The European Union wants to formulate objectives regarding the presence of salmonella in beef cattle and meat. Pork chains in most European countries currently have no formal control system covering the entire chain, nor any systems that reward or punish farmers for the extent to which their beef cattle is infected with the bacteria, reports Wageningen University Research. Together with his American colleague Rob King, Wageningen’s Gé Backus has published an academic paper in the European Review of Agricultural Economics. In this paper, they address this issue with a model approach which looks at various control systems and reward packages.

The research demonstrates that a combination of a control system at slaughterhouse level and a payment system that stimulates the pig farmer to supply slaughter pigs with no or low levels of infection leads to considerably lower costs than simpler systems. Depending on the circumstances, a reduction in costs of 28 per cent to 83 per cent can be expected. With this academic paper, the authors are building upon previous work that also appeared in this prominent publication. They are also working ahead in anticipation of a cost-benefit analysis of the measure that the EU has yet to make.









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