December 30, 2013

 

Canadian meat processors seek re-inspection of US, Canada meat trade

 

 

Canadian meat processors want to see action on the programme which was developed as part of the Canada-US Beyond the Border Action Plan to eliminate border re-inspection of meat products traded between the two countries.


The programme consists of a series of specific proposals to support bilateral trade and travel between the two countries. Meat that is exported from the US is not re-inspected at the border. Instead, meat products are sent into Canada to one of hundreds of Canadian federally registered establishments where product samples are collected and testing is performed.


Canadian meat exporters pay more than US$3.6 million in fees annually to privately owned US inspection houses located near the US-Canada border, and those fees are not regulated by the USDA. This means the inspection houses can charge whatever amounts they wish to Canadian exporters, while US exporters do not pay similar fees when exporting to Canada.


"Meat should move as easily from Canada into the US as it currently does from the US into Canada," said Jim Laws, executive director of the Canadian Meat Council. "Indeed, meat should move as freely between Canada and the US as it does between most countries of the EU."


The pilot project would have eliminated border re-inspection for one year. It was scheduled to begin in September 2012, but the project never got off the ground.


"Canadian meat processors recognise and appreciate the progress that has been achieved during the past two years on a variety of Beyond the Border projects, including the Single Window and the Border Fees Transparency initiatives," said Arnold Drung, Canadian Meat Council president. "At the same time, we regret the apparent absence of the progress on the promised bi-national pilot project on meat shipments."

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