This
is yet another case of, one minute you see it, the next you don't.
This
is another example of a huge threat to New Zealand's agriculture and
to the entire economy. This time this is down to government policy –
a government that pays less than lip service to policies of border
control that have served this country well for many years.
Everything
is subservient to the interests of 'free trade' and the international
financial elite that this government serves.
The
government has broken down every mechanism that would serve to
protect this country from imported diseases, instead choosing to set
up a super-ministry (read super-bureaucracy).
The
official response to a tragic (and in this case, preventible) crisis
is, 'we've got a world-class service'.
I
recommend listening to the comments of John Lancashire,
immediate past president of New Zealand Institute of Agricultural and
Horticultural Science in the interview below.
See THIS, from Frank McSkasy
See THIS, from Frank McSkasy
Gaps
seen in plan to deal with foot and mouth
Officials
responsible for managing New Zealand's biosecurity admit there are
gaps in plans for dealing with serious breaches, including a
potentially catastrophic outbreak of foot and mouth disease.
1
March, 2013
Officials
responsible for managing New Zealand's biosecurity admit there are
gaps in plans for dealing with serious breaches, including a
potentially catastrophic outbreak of foot and mouth disease.
A
report by the auditor-general found that while the Ministry of
Primary Industries had largely been successful in dealing with past
incursions, it was not properly prepared for potential incursions of
high-risk organisms.
Foot
and mouth is a infectious and potentially fatal viral disease that
affects cloven-hoofed animals. There has never been an outbreak in
New Zealand, but it is considered one of the greatest threats to the
farming industry.
A
Reserve Bank report predicted an outbreak would cost New Zealand's
economy $13 billion in the first two years, with primary products
blocked from many export markets.
The
auditor-general's report highlighted a series of mergers in which
responsibility for biosecurity has passed between government
departments five times in nine years.
Spending
on the biosecurity activities covered by the report in 2011-12 was at
the lowest level in at least five years.
Auditor-General
Lyn Provost said there were "many instances" where new
biosecurity initiatives were never completed or embedded.
As
well as a series of specific recommendations for a foot and mouth
outbreak, the report recommended MPI take a reality check.
"Make
all biosecurity planning more realistic by ensuring that plans
reflect likely constraints on resources and reflect more accurately
the capacity available to deliver them."
Andrew
Coleman, deputy director-general of the MPI, said steps were already
being taken to address issues highlighted by the report, but he
acknowledged there was still issues. "There are still some gaps,
but we're working towards filling these gaps over time."
Biosecurity
preparedness was a continual process, but some of the specific
recommendations, such as dealing with hundreds of carcasses in a foot
and mouth outbreak, should be dealt with within 12 months, Mr Coleman
said.
A
spokesman for Federated Farmers saidthe department was working much
more closely with industry on biosecurity, although there was still
"a long way to go".
MPI
PUTTING NZ AT RISK SAYS BIOSECURITY EXPERT
A
world authority on foot and mouth disease says the Government is
putting the economy at risk because it is more focused on overseas
trade than biosecurity.
John Lancashire, immediate past president of New Zealand Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Science; and Rob Thode, a Te Puke kiwifruit grower whose orchard was infected with PSA
Otago
research tracks kiwifruit disease to China
University
of Otago researchers have proved a canker disease that heavily
damaged the New Zealand kiwifruit industry originated in China.
1
March, 2013
Pseudomonas
syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa) has spread to more than 1000 New
Zealand orchards since it was discovered in the Bay of Plenty region
in November 2010, and long-term costs are estimated at nearly $900
million.
The
Otago research provides strong evidence China was the source not only
of the Psa outbreak in North Island kiwifruit orchards, but also of
the 2008 and 2010 outbreaks in Italy and Chile, respectively. The
research, involving advanced genomics technology, has also shed more
light on the role of key ''mobile genetic elements'' within Psa.
Researchers
say the presence of these elements, which may add to the disease's
virulence, underscore the growing importance of strict border
control.
To
analyse the geographic origins of Psa, the researchers sequenced and
compared the genomes of strains from Japan, Chile, China, Italy and
New Zealand.
Assoc
Prof Russell Poulter, Prof Iain Lamont and Dr Margi Butler, all of
the Otago biochemistry department, undertook the DNA detective work.
Prof
Poulter said the researchers were ''really delighted'' with the way
their ''internationally significant'' research was progressing.
The
researchers had been focusing on mobile genetic elements they had
detected in the Psa genome.
These
elements - termed ICE or ''integrative conjugative elements''- could
transfer between cells of different bacteria strains and alter
properties such as their infectiousness and resistance to
antibiotics.
Three
distinct ICEs had been identified by the Otago team- one was shared
by the New Zealand strains, and others linked to Italian and Chilean
strains.
Some
Psa might be ''inherently more virulent'' because of the particular
ICE it carried.
This
had ''worrying implications''. Strains of kiwifruit that were
resistant to one type of Psa might not be resistant to another.
''This
means strict border control by kiwifruit-producing countries is more
important than ever,'' Prof Poulter said.
The
Otago research also underscored the importance of powerful,
multimillion-dollar, genetic sequencing equipment co-ordinated by New
Zealand Genomics Ltd (NZGL) and based at the Otago department.
NZGL
is a collaborative government-funded initiative, involving Auckland,
Massey and Otago Universities.
Prof
Poulter said much of the sequencing work had been completed in about
two weeks. The task would have been ''impossible''- taking about 1000
years to complete- using equipment previously available in Dunedin.
Of all of National's slash-and-burn cuts to State sector services - this is the worst. It trumps child poverty. It trumps education cuts. It trumps everything.
ReplyDeleteThis has the potential to wreck our economy and society.
In May last year I wrote this, predicting that National's policies were setting us up for a disaster of incalculable magnitude: http://fmacskasy.wordpress.com/2012/05/12/bugs-and-balls-ups/
If New Zealanders haven't got it through their thick heads yet that National's tax cuts and slashing of the State sector came at a perilous price - then by god we truly and richly deserve the consequences.
The $900 million cost to the kiwifruit industry will be a drop in the bucket compared to WHEN (not IF) the biological "Big One" strikes: foot and mouth.
And my next prediction? Don't expect a single damned National Minister to take responsibility. Instead, expect our grinning fool of a Prime Minister to deflect blame to the previous Labour government, or welfare beneficiaries, sunspots, or whatever.
Perhaps this is what New Zealanders need as the ultimate wake-up call.
Thanks, Frank, for your comments, as well as your contribution to ensuring that the message of how this government is literally raping the country, and betraying a whole generation, gets out.
ReplyDeleteRead excerpts from prior research at http://summonthemagic.blogspot.com/2013/02/many-moons-and-many-junes.html along with http://www.iaem.com/documents/SimsandVCOPs1.pdf
ReplyDelete(see http://summonthemagic.blogspot.com/2012/01/undisputed-sovereignty-of-human-being.html for background)
I designed the communications engine for a DARPA-funded (then aborted) "virtual desktop exercise" (simulation game) to help civilian emergency management teams understand "vectors", "fomites", quarantining, etc.