Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Agriculture minister says Alberta BSE case will not affect beef trade

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2015 10:32 AM

    CALGARY — Mad cow disease has been confirmed in a beef cow on an Alberta farm, but the federal agriculture minister says the discovery won't affect Canada's international beef trade.

    "We have a very fulsome testing procedure. We don't change from our controlled risk status ... so we don't see this interfering with any of our trade corridors at this time," Gerry Ritz said Friday after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirmed the case.

    Canada works under international protocols that allow for up to a dozen cases a year of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE, Ritz said.

    "We have stayed well below that."

    Alberta did initial testing on the cow and Ottawa was informed a few days ago, Ritz said. The CFIA followed up with further tests.

    The agency said no part of the animal's carcass entered the human food or animal feed systems.

    It's the first case to be reported in Canada since 2011.

    Ritz said the infected animal was not born on the farm where it was discovered. The CFIA said it is still trying to determine the cow's history and how it became infected.

    "The investigation will focus in on the feed supplied to this animal during the first year of its life," the agency said in a release. "The agency will also trace out all animals of equivalent risk. Equivalent risk animals will be ordered destroyed and tested for BSE."

    It says Canada continues to be designated a "controlled BSE risk" country by the World Organisation for Animal Health.

    Doug Gillespie, president of the Saskatchewan Stock Growers Association, said the new case isn't surprising.

    "They expect to find one of these from time to time ... It really shows our system is working, that beef is safe. It really never reached the food chain or anything," he said from his farm near Swift Current, Sask.

    "Of course there's always concern, but we'll see where it goes from here."

    BSE is a fatal and untreatable wasting disease of the brain and nervous systems and is caused by rogue proteins called prions.

    Humans who eat infected beef can develop a fatal disease called variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Fewer than 250 human cases have been reported worldwide.

    Canada's first known case was discovered in 1993 in a cow from a farm near Red Deer, Alta. The animal had been imported from Britain.

    The first instance of BSE in a Canadian-born beef cow was in May 2003. It's suspected that animal became infected through contaminated animal feed that contained a protein supplement made with ground meat and bone meal.

    The first home-grown case of BSE devastated Canada's beef industry. About 40 markets immediately closed their borders to Canadian cattle and beef products, although many of those markets have since reopened.

    Testing of cattle was strengthened following the mad cow crisis and specified risk materials, such as brains and spinal columns, were banned for use in feed and other products.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inquest told Manitoba reserve had no chance fighting house fire without truck

    Inquest told Manitoba reserve had no chance fighting house fire without truck
    WINNIPEG — An RCMP officer who investigated a fatal house fire in a Manitoba aboriginal community says people trying to fight the flames didn't have a chance without a fire truck.

    Inquest told Manitoba reserve had no chance fighting house fire without truck

    Following the money in U.S. politics: Group maps out special-interest cash

    Following the money in U.S. politics: Group maps out special-interest cash
    WASHINGTON — These are busy days for a group that works to map out the money ties in a U.S. political system covered in special-interest cash.

    Following the money in U.S. politics: Group maps out special-interest cash

    Canadian home sales activity stable in November, but 2014 better than expected

    Canadian home sales activity stable in November, but 2014 better than expected
    OTTAWA — The Canadian Real Estate Association raised its outlook for home sales for this year and next as mortgage rates have remained low and helped drive sales.

    Canadian home sales activity stable in November, but 2014 better than expected

    Second Alberta Crash In A Month Kills Multiple Foreign Workers From Philippines

    Second Alberta Crash In A Month Kills Multiple Foreign Workers From Philippines
    RCMP say one woman and two men died when the Ford Mustang they were in lost control on Highway 11 between Red Deer and Rocky Mountain House on Saturday and collided with a five-ton truck heading the other way.

    Second Alberta Crash In A Month Kills Multiple Foreign Workers From Philippines

    Ontario Govt Says Websites Back To Normal

    Ontario Govt Says Websites Back To Normal
    TORONTO - A hacking problem that affected the Ontario government's websites have been resolved and the province says full service is being restored.

    Ontario Govt Says Websites Back To Normal

    No Winner For Saturday's Lotto 649 Jackpot

    No Winner For Saturday's Lotto 649 Jackpot
    TORONTO — The $5 million jackpot in Saturday night`s Lotto 649 draw went unclaimed.

    No Winner For Saturday's Lotto 649 Jackpot