Commission approves €275 million for the eradication, monitoring and control of animal diseases

Published: 26 November 2009 y., Thursday

Lapė
Today, the European Commission adopted a financial package of €275 million to support programmes to eradicate, control and monitor animal diseases in 2010. The 224 annual or multi-annual programmes which were selected for EU funding will tackle animal diseases that impact both human and animal health. The large EU contribution towards these programmes reflects the high level of importance attached to disease eradication measures, for the protection of both animal and public health.

EU Health Commissioner Androulla Vassiliou said " The motto of our animal health strategy is 'prevention is better than cure'. If the spread of certain animal diseases is not prevented, it can affect both animal and public health. That is why we are prioritising programmes covering diseases that might be transmitted to humans ".

Each year the Commission approves programmes for the eradication and monitoring of animal diseases, for the control of zoonoses such as salmonella, for the monitoring and eradication of TSEs and for avian influenza surveillance. These approved programmes receive financial contributions from the EU.

For 2010, 224 eradication, control and monitoring programmes for animal diseases and zoonoses have been approved, for which Member States wish to receive a financial contribution from the Community for 2010.

Animal disease eradication programmes

For the year 2010, 76 annual or multi-annual programmes to eradicate 10 important animal diseases have been granted Community financial support. The total EU contribution to these programmes is around €174M. The increased budget for 2010 is mainly due to allocations to counter Bluetongue disease in many Member States and the approval for the first time of a Bovine Tuberculosis eradication programme for UK. TB programmes are expensive and the EU will provide €12M for Ireland, €10M for UK and €7.5M for Spain.

Within this budget, diseases that might be transmitted to humans are prioritised. Significant sums are being spent on the eradication of brucellosis, tuberculosis and rabies. Following the success of the programmes in recent years which have virtually eradicated rabies in the western part of the EU, most of the activity in 2010 will be focused towards the Member States on the Eastern border of the EU, almost €12M have been allocated to this task. Rabies is spread by infected wildlife and the programmes aim at producing immunity in the wildlife by orally vaccinating them with baits containing vaccine.

Zoonoses control programmes

Salmonella programmes have further expanded this year with the inclusion of activities in turkey farms (now turkey, broilers, layers and breeders are covered). Historically, the use of salmonella funds have been difficult to predict and funds have often been underused as a large part of the cost depends on the slaughter of infected flocks, whose value varies considerably depending on the stage of production.

A financial contribution of €26M has been allocated to control zoonotic salmonella in poultry ( Gallus gallus) and turkey flocks (Meleagris gallopavo) in 25 Member States.

Avian influenza surveillance

Member States will also continue to carry out surveillance for avian influenza in poultry and wild birds in 2010 with financial assistance from the EU towards laboratory testing and wild birds sampling costs. More than €4M will be available from the EU budget.

This surveillance is the most effective way to detect early outbreaks of both high and low pathogenic influenzas and was extremely useful in previous years, allowing early detection of avian influenza in wild birds before commercial flocks became infected.

Monitoring and eradication programmes for Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSEs)

The overall trend is positive and is improving year after year due to a good implementation of the monitoring and eradication programmes in most Member States.

The Commission has agreed to make €67M available from the EU budget to assist Member States in the compulsory monitoring of TSEs, and for BSE eradication and Scrapie eradication measures. The requests from Member States for BSE eradication (i.e. culling of cohorts of BSE infected animals) have dropped in line with the reduction in new BSE cases and which have become rather unpredictable. The second year of the special multi-annual programme for scrapie eradication submitted by Cyprus is included and over €8M has been allocated as foreseen.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

How safe are your Christmas lights?

EU testing shows serious risk of shocks and fire in many lights. Stay safe – turn them off when you go to bed or leave the house. more »

MEPs look at conditions in Luanda's shanty towns

The European Parliament has a close relationship with African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) states and during the 18th ACP/EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly in Angola, MEPs took time to visit the new city of Kilamba Kiaxi, south of Luanda, where 20,000 apartments are being built. more »

Global warming: less meat = less heat

Everyone can fight climate change by not eating meat one day a week, urged Sir Paul McCartney at a European Parliament public hearing on "Global Warming and Food Policy: Less Meat = Less Heat" on Thursday. more »

Millennium of the Name of Lithuania marked in SHAPE

Movies of Lithuanian cinema were demonstrated in the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) near Mons (Belgium) from November 9 to 11. more »

30% of Christmas lights are a “serious safety risk” in the home, warns EU report

30% of Christmas lights present an obvious and direct risk of fire and electric shocks according to a new report published today by the European Commission. more »

Don't mention the Wars!

Irish national TV Europe correspondent, Tony Connelly launched his new book “Don't mention the Wars: A Journey Through European Stereotypes” at European Union House, Dublin, on 25 November 2009. more »

Two wives equals one big fight

A wedding for a man and woman in Southern Peru clearly didn't count on the attendance of at least two guests-- family members of the groom's current wife. more »

Children and young people shall be protected from alcohol

Day two of the Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council was primarily dedicated to health and public health issues. more »

Naked anti fur protest

A cold and rainy day in Madrid, Spain - at just degrees celsius not the best conditions for a naked demonstration. more »

Commission approves €275 million for the eradication, monitoring and control of animal diseases

Today, the European Commission adopted a financial package of €275 million to support programmes to eradicate, control and monitor animal diseases in 2010. more »