| 08/03/06           A VITAL vote in Europe to pave the way towards lifting the ten-year-old
                restrictions on British beef exports has been given a hearty
                welcome by John Cross, Chairman of the English Beef and Lamb
              Executive (EBLEX). Following the meeting today in which Member States on the EU Standing
              Committee for the Food Chain and Animal Health (SCoFCAH) unanimously
              supported the proposal to end the restrictions, John said that
              years of hard work by the whole industry and the government was
            finally paying off. He said: “This is an important move forward which will allow
              our beef industry to exploit the contacts that EBLEX and the Meat
              and Livestock Commission have spent many years nurturing with the
              trade across the EU. “Access to export markets will help assure a more stable
              future for our beef producers and processors, and means our industry
              will no longer be isolated from the EU market.  Our beef industry
              can now start to get on with the job of providing overseas customers
              with the quality product they are clearly telling us they want.” 
 A press release from the European
            Commission Brussels, 08 March 2006BSE: UK beef embargo to be liftedThe Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health
                today adopted unanimously a favourable opinion on a European
                Commission proposal to lift the embargo on UK exports of live
                cattle, beef and beef products.. The proposal is now expected
                to be adopted by the Commission in about 6 weeks time, as the
                European Parliament has a one month right of scrutiny. The ban
                on the export of UK beef was issued in March 1996 (with certain
                derogations introduced in 1999), due to the high incidence of
                BSE cases in the UK at the time. The proposal was made on the
                basis that the UK has fulfilled the conditions laid down by the
                Commission in its TSE Road Map (adopted in July 2005) in order
                for the ban to be lifted. These were to have an incidence of
                BSE below a certain level and to demonstrate that the BSE controls
                laid down in EU legislation were being fully and properly applied.
                Once the proposal is adopted and published in the Official Journal,
                the UK will  be able to export live cattle born after 1
                August 1996, and bovine meat and products produced after 15 June
                2005, under the same terms as other Member States. 
 Markos Kyprianou, Commissioner for Health and Consumer Protection,
              said "The Commission has taken no chances when it has
              come to dealing with BSE, and the most stringent monitoring and
              control measures have been applied. Precautionary measures, including
              the embargo on UK beef exports, were taken when deemed necessary
              to fully protect consumers. However, the UK has made great strides
              in tackling this disease, and has met all of the criteria that
              were set for the lifting of the beef export ban, in line with scientific
              and veterinary advice. We must now acknowledge this and resume
              normal trade in this area."
 
 UK beef ban
 
 The export ban on UK cattle, their meat and products, has been
              in place since March 1996 (Commission Decision 96/239/EC). In 1999,
              the ban was amended to allow de-boned beef and beef products from
              the UK produced under the Date-based Export Scheme (DBES) to be
              exported. Under the DBES, the UK could export beef and products
              from cattle born after 1 August 1996, subject to a series of strict
              and limited conditions. These included requirements that the animal
              was between 6 and 30 months old, had been clearly traced and identified
              throughout its lifetime, its mother did not develop BSE, and that
              beef from cattle older than 9 months was de-boned. In practice,
              the DBES did not result in the export any significant amount of
              UK beef.
 
 Moving towards lifting the ban
 
 The possible lifting of the UK embargo was foreseen in the European
              Commission's TSE Roadmap published in July 2005 and discussed with
              the European Parliament and Council (see IP/05/952). The Commission
              laid out very clear conditions which had to be met before the restrictions
              on UK beef exports could be lifted. Firstly, the UK would have
              to have a BSE incidence below 200 cases per million animals, and
              secondly, the EU Food and Veterinary Office (FVO) would have to
              deliver a favourable report on the enforcement of BSE controls
              in the UK and its compliance with EU legislation in this field.
 
 The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) issued an Opinion in
              May 2004, confirming that BSE incidence in the UK was below 200
              cases per million, and therefore not anymore considered a high
              BSE risk country.   In June 2005, an inspection carried
              out by the EU Food and Veterinary Office confirmed that BSE controls
              were being properly enforced in the UK, and that its compliance
              with EU legislation, particularly in relation to identification
              and registration of bovine animals and testing, was satisfactory.
 
 Resuming trade
 
 Under today's agreement to lift the embargo, the UK will be allowed
              to resume exports of all live animals born after 1 August 1996.
              This is the date when the EU meat-and-bonemeal feed ban entered
              into effect and, under EU legislation, no cattle born before this
              date are allowed enter the food chain under any circumstances.
              UK meat and meat products produced after 15 June 2005 (linked to
              the date of the favourable FVO inspection) will also be allowed
              to be traded freely.  The UK will have to adjust its legislation
              for beef-on-the-bone, and reduce its current age limit of 30 months
              for the removal of the vertebral column to 24 months. This will
              bring it in line with the 24 month rule applied by all other Member
              States (see IP/05/1223), and set the UK on equal footing in terms
              of trade.
 
 Next steps
 
 The decision to lift the UK embargo will now be sent to the European
              Parliament, which has a right of scrutiny during one month. The
              legal texts related to lifting the embargo will then be formally
              adopted by the Commission and published in the Official Journal,
              after which they will immediately enter into force ( which normally
            takes an additional two weeks).
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