Pork Producers Adopt Enhanced Swine Traceability Resolution at National Pork Industry Forum

"Industry delegates at Pork Forum took a proactive step to protect animal health and producers’ livelihoods,” says Scott Hays, NPPC president.
"Industry delegates at Pork Forum took a proactive step to protect animal health and producers’ livelihoods,” says Scott Hays, NPPC president.
(Jennifer Shike)

U.S. pork producers approved a resolution to enhance the country’s live swine traceability system during the 2024 National Pork Industry Forum on March 7. 

“Traceability is a priority for the industry and has been for decades," Lori Stevermer, incoming National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) president and Minnesota pork producer, said in a release. "These standards will improve our ability to control the spread of a foreign animal disease and lessen the economic impact of an outbreak should one occur."
 
A producer-led task force brought together stakeholders throughout the entire pork supply chain in 2022 to identify and address current gaps in the live swine traceability system. This task force offered a series of comment periods for producers to provide input on the enhanced standards, NPPC said in a release.

That process resulted in the following recommendations: 
•    All swine owners would need to register for a premises identification number (PIN).
•    High-risk swine (from a traceability perspective), including cull breeding stock and show/exhibition stock, would be required to be tagged with an AIN (animal identification number) RFID (radio frequency) tag.
•    Producers would be asked to record consistent data points, including PIN of origin, PIN of destination, date of movement, animal type, and any official identification that is present. Producers would be asked to record this data electronically within three business days.
•    Movement data would be reported to a centralized database following the detection of a trade-limiting disease.
•    Semen would require a label with the PIN of the source herd.
•    Cull markets and packing plants would use tattoo numbers unique to each facility.

“Industry delegates at Pork Forum took a proactive step to protect animal health and producers’ livelihoods. An outbreak of a foreign animal disease in the United States, such as African swine fever or foot-and-mouth disease, would result in the immediate suspension of pork exports from the U.S., which totaled over $8.2 billion in pork and pork products last year,” Scott Hays, NPPC president, said in a release.
 
Next Steps
What's next? NPPC said the approved standards will be submitted to USDA for inclusion in the regulations mandating live swine traceability. To view the enhanced standards or learn more, visit nppc.org/trace.
 

 

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