Friday, April 26, 2024

Trans-Tasman effort against FMD

Avatar photo
Agriculture ministers discuss joint efforts to reduce biosecurity risks.
Reading Time: < 1 minute

A trans-Tasman effort is underway to ensure foot-and-mouth disease is kept out of Australia and New Zealand.

Australia’s Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Senator Murray Watt, met with his NZ counterpart, Damien O’Connor, Minister of Agriculture, Biosecurity and Rural Communities, last week.

Watt said biosecurity is a central component of Australia’s close and productive relationship with NZ amid a range of common risks, especially the FMD outbreak in Indonesia.

“Minister O’Connor and I had a very good meeting and reaffirmed our commitment to maintaining stringent arrangements to protect our countries’ respective biosecurity status,” Watt said.

“We discussed ongoing work by senior biosecurity officials to harmonise approaches where possible, primarily focusing on how we are managing the risks of FMD.

“Both countries are signatories to the International Animal Health Emergency Reserve, which would afford us additional human resources in the event of an emergency animal disease outbreak, allowing for faster control and increased chances of eradication.”

O’Connor said greater co-operation is integral to reducing biosecurity risks in the region as threats from FMD and fruit fly loom over Australasia.

“I am very pleased to have discussed joint efforts to strengthen preparedness and response capabilities with Minister Watt today and evolve our biosecurity interventions, so we stay in step with each other” O’Connor said.

“Since 2018, Australia and New Zealand have collaborated on developing world-first digital technology as part of the trans-Tasman co-operation on biosecurity risk detection.

“We continue to work together on a range of biosecurity initiatives, such as increasing our intelligence capacity to ensure our biosecurity systems are world’s best.”

Total
0
Shares
People are also reading