NZPork Appeals High Court Judgment
NZPork Appeals High Court Judgment
NZPork
has filed papers appealing against a High Court judgment
which would have opened the way for new import health
standards, and exposed New Zealand’s pigs to the Porcine
Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS)
virus.
Ian Carter, NZPork Chairman, said NZPork has
been left with no option because the Ministry of Primary
Industries’ (MPI) response to the judgment on 4th May did
not alleviate the industry’s concerns, which is to
effectively manage the risk of PRRS infecting New
Zealand’s pig herd.
“Courts cannot determine
scientific arguments, but we hoped the High Court would
require MAF – now the Ministry for Primary Industries –
to follow a more robust and transparent process that
considered the science and the New Zealand environment
before relaxing the import rules,” Mr Carter
said.
“How can MPI decide that the risk of a PRRS
outbreak is ‘acceptable’ without knowing how much
diseased product we might expect to enter New Zealand, how
it would be disposed of, and where any waste would end
up?
“We need effective controls and enforcement
around waste feeding to pigs, and that all pig owners know
what the rules are. This needs to be done before
infectious product is released. As a farmer I’ve seen no
evidence of this actually happening, out in rural areas
where the risk is. We cannot allow our animals and our
livelihoods to be at the mercy of imported infectious pig
meat without evidence from MPI that they can manage the
risk.
“The rules in place until now have kept our
animals safe from PRRS, making New Zealand one of very few
countries in the world that have remained free of
PRRS.
“This is not a trade matter. Pig meat
imports from countries affected by PRRS have almost doubled
since the rules requiring treatment of potentially infected
meat were introduced in 2001. In total, about 800,000 kg of
pig meat is imported into New Zealand each week, which is
about 45% of total pig meat consumed.
“Concern
with New Zealand’s biosecurity is growing right now, with
New Zealand’s primary industries suffering with PSA, and
the tomato and potato psyllid to name a couple. New Zealand
has just mounted a significant exercise to check for an
incursion of the Queensland fruit fly. The pig meat issue is
yet a further example of loosening biosecurity controls by
knowingly permitting an exotic highly infectious organism to
be released into New Zealand.
“It is our farmers
who will have to live with this devastating virus every day
long after the MPI officials have moved on,” Mr Carter
said.
ENDS