Abstract

A case is made for greater emphasis to be placed on value chain management as an alternative to geographically based disease risk mitigation for trade in commodities and products derived from animals. The geographic approach is dependent upon achievement of freedom in countries or zones from infectious agents that cause so-called transboundary animal diseases, while value chain-based risk management depends upon mitigation of animal disease hazards potentially associated with specific commodities or products irrespective of the locality of production. This commodity-specific approach is founded on the same principles upon which international food safety standards are based, viz. hazard analysis critical control points (HACCP). Broader acceptance of a value chain approach enables animal disease risk management to be combined with food safety management by the integration of commodity-based trade and HACCP methodologies and thereby facilitates 'farm to fork' quality assurance. The latter is increasingly recognized as indispensable to food safety assurance and is therefore a pre-condition to safe trade. The biological principles upon which HACCP and commodity-based trade are based are essentially identical, potentially simplifying sanitary control in contrast to current separate international sanitary standards for food safety and animal disease risks that are difficult to reconcile. A value chain approach would not only enable more effective integration of food safety and animal disease risk management of foodstuffs derived from animals but would also ameliorate adverse environmental and associated socio-economic consequences of current sanitary standards based on the geographic distribution of animal infections. This is especially the case where vast veterinary cordon fencing systems are relied upon to separate livestock and wildlife as is the case in much of southern Africa. A value chain approach would thus be particularly beneficial to under-developed regions of the world such as southern Africa specifically and sub-Saharan Africa more generally where it would reduce incompatibility between attempts to expand and commercialize livestock production and the need to conserve the subcontinent's unparalleled wildlife and wilderness resources.

Highlights

  • Current international trade standards based on the geographic distribution of transboundary animal diseases (TADs) exclude large numbers of livestock producers in southern Africa from high-value markets for livestock products

  • The CA, as is universally the case for systems designed for management of food safety, adopts Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) (FAO, 2006), while the Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)’s Terrestrial Animal Health Code (TAHC) traditionally adopts the concept that risk associated with trade in animal commodities is preferentially mitigated by ensuring that infections capable of causing TADs are not present in the locality of production, i.e. if these infections do not occur in the locality of production, they cannot be spread by commodities sourced there

  • The potential application of HACCP-based approaches to management of animal diseaseassociated trade risks is frequently confounded by the perception that HACCP is (1) exclusively a food safety tool and (2) applicable only to specific enterprises such as abattoirs or meat processing plants but not more broadly to, for example, complex value chains

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Summary

Introduction

Current international trade standards based on the geographic distribution of transboundary animal diseases (TADs) exclude large numbers of livestock producers in southern Africa from high-value markets for livestock products. The CA, as is universally the case for systems designed for management of food safety, adopts HACCP (FAO, 2006), while the OIE’s TAHC traditionally adopts the concept that risk associated with trade in animal commodities is preferentially mitigated by ensuring that infections capable of causing TADs are not present in the locality of production, i.e. if these infections do not occur in the locality of production, they cannot be spread by commodities sourced there This geographic approach on the part of the TAHC is progressively being supplemented by introduction of standards that are not strictly geographic, e.g. compartmentalisation and lists of commodities that are inherently safe in respect of the diseases covered by individual TAHC chapters (a list of such commodities is provided at the start of some chapters). Semi-quantitative assessment of the features of different risk management mechanisms associated with trade in commodities and products derived from animals (viewed from the perspective of FMD control)

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