The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Review: Industry should take more ‘ownership’ of TB control

BOVINE TB: Arrangemen­ts surroundin­g costly disease scrutinise­d

- NANCY NICOLSON AND EMILY BEAMENT nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Greater responsibi­lity for the control of Bovine TB (bTB) in England should lie with the farming industry, a major review of Defra’s handling of the costly and controvers­ial disease has concluded.

The Bovine TB Strategy Review, which is published today, states that current arrangemen­ts have resulted in too little “ownership” of the disease by the farming industry and a widespread implicit belief that bovine TB is the government’s problem alone.

It says poor take-up of relatively cheap biosecurit­y measures on farms and trading in high-risk livestock is hampering disease control.

The review, chaired by Professor Sir Charles Godfray from Oxford University, concludes that there would be advantages in retaining high-level policy making in Defra but devolving much of the disease control operations to a new body that would take over functions performed by APHA, Natural England and local authoritie­s.

Sir Charles said some in the farming sector were doing “tremendous things” on bTB, but there was “fatalism” over the disease in other parts of the industry.

He said: “We realise that wildlife does have a role in this disease, but it’s wrong to put all the blame on wildlife and to use this as an excuse to not make hard decisions in industry, which is going to cost the industry money.”

Asked to quantify the contributi­on to disease spread from badgers and the farming industry, through cattle to cattle infection, Sir Charles added: “If I was asked to say more one than the other, I would say definitely on the cattle to cattle side.”

The review also investigat­es the system of compensati­on received by farmers and recommends exploring a compulsory insurance programme.

 ??  ?? Wildlife ‘should not carry all the blame’ for the spread of bTB.
Wildlife ‘should not carry all the blame’ for the spread of bTB.

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