PED poses health and economic threats to Canada's pork industry Thursday, June 20, 2013 by SUSAN MANNThe Canadian pork industry will suffer big time losses if Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea spreads here from the United States, says a swine industry official.Canadian Swine Health Board executive director Robert Harding says some estimates pegged the losses at more than $1 billion if PED rolls through the Canadian industry.The Canadian herd doesn’t have immunity against the virus and that’s why the industry would suffer disastrous economic losses. The disease was detected for the first time in North America in several Midwestern states in the United States in May. The cause of the outbreak there still hasn’t been determined.The swine health board is encouraging all pork industry stakeholders to be diligent in preventing the spread of PED. The call for diligence is part of the board’s national PED strategy. Other strategic components include:Heightened biosecurity.Effective surveillance.Information updates through the board’s free electronic daily service (subscribe by emailing info@swinehealth.ca).Risk analysis.Control.Harding says many of these components have been in place since the beginning but “there’s a lot of work still to do.”Industry participants should continue with heightened biosecurity, surveillance and being informed, he says. But if PED does land here, the industry should also be prepared to contain it.Harding says there is a high likelihood the disease will come to Canada. “There are an awful lot of pigs trucks that cross that border.” He is referring to pigs being transported to the United States from Canada and the trucks coming back into Canada with possibly other animal species on board.Breeding stock is the only type of pig that would be coming into Canada from the United States. Harding says the breeding industry is on heightened alert. “They go through a quarantine process.”Harding says trucking industry leaders have called the swine board to obtain information and outline their cleaning and disinfecting procedures. “We’ve been impressed with the transport industry.”That’s just one example of how everyone in the Canadian industry recognizes they have a role to play, he adds.PED is an aggressive virus that causes widespread watery diarrhea in all ages of pigs but leads to almost 100 per cent mortality in nursing pigs, the swine board says in a press release. Other ages of pigs are affected too but not as severely as nursing pigs. BF Hog farmer wants borders closed to protect animals against virus The importance of export markets for Ontario pork
SARM Calling for Stronger Rural Emergency Funding Friday, March 6, 2026 The Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities (SARM) is calling on provincial and federal governments to strengthen funding and partnerships that support emergency response services across rural Saskatchewan. Rural municipalities playa major rolein protecting communities during... Read this article online
Ag included in Carney’s trip to Japan Friday, March 6, 2026 Canada’s ag industry is part of the equation when it comes to the country’s continued relationship with Japan. A March 6 joint statement by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi indicates establishing a “comprehensive strategic partnership,” which includes... Read this article online
A new front in the repair access debate Friday, March 6, 2026 Iowa lawmakers have pushed the right‑to‑repair conversation into new territory with House File 2529, a bill that focuses specifically on diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) systems—the single most common cause of emissions-related downtime on modern farm machinery. The bill would require... Read this article online
March 8 is International Women’s Day Friday, March 6, 2026 Across the United States and Canada, women are taking on increasingly visible roles in agriculture—managing farms, leading ag-tech startups, advancing research, and strengthening the rural economies that feed both nations. Their work reflects a shift in an industry once defined... Read this article online
Alberta Pork Launches First-of-Its-Kind Retail Contest Thursday, March 5, 2026 Alberta Pork is putting Canadian pork in the spotlight this spring with a new retail promotion designed to encourage shoppers to choose Verified Canadian Pork (VCP) at the grocery store. Running from February 23 to March 30, the is the first initiative of its kind in Canada, offering... Read this article online