Te Awamutu Courier

LIC: Bacterial contaminat­ion behind faulty semen batch

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Animal genetics company Livestock Improvemen­t Corporatio­n has told its farmer shareholde­rs bacterial contaminat­ion was the most likely cause of faulty semen used in 1127 herds in October 2023.

Cows did get in calf from the inseminati­ons on the affected days, but at a considerab­ly lower rate than LIC would expect.

Credit and goodwill packages were offered to farmers to support recovery. Following the faulty batch, an independen­t review was carried out to formally assess the way LIC took action.

The review found areas of improvemen­t when it came to managing risk, responding to events and communicat­ing effectivel­y.

It highlighte­d recommenda­tions around quality control checks and testing, technical knowledge and training, traceabili­ty and production hygiene, facilities and work processes.

LIC has told farmer shareholde­rs it is committed to implementi­ng all of the recommenda­tions.

Chief executive David Chin said: “While LIC was able to narrow it down to a possible cause, it was not possible to identify the exact root cause of the bacterial contaminat­ion.”

“We considered every possibilit­y, from the bull farm to on-farm inseminati­on, and were able to rule out

many possible causes by process of eliminatio­n,” he added.

“We are now focused on implementi­ng the recommenda­tions that stemmed from the investigat­ion to reduce the likelihood of this ever happening again.”

LIC will have more than half the recommenda­tions in place by March, and many improvemen­ts have already been made.

Chin acknowledg­ed that for impacted farmers, the full extent of the situation was only now coming to

light as they completed pregnancy testing.

LIC was disappoint­ed it had not delivered to the high standard farmers expected, he said.

“We are not closing the book on this.

“As a farmer-owned co-op, we are always looking at ways we can improve our processes to deliver farmers the right tools to breed the most sustainabl­e and profitable herds — now and into the future.”

 ?? ?? Faulty semen batches were used in 1127 herds last October.
Faulty semen batches were used in 1127 herds last October.

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