Oz tomato seed imports banned
Biosecurity New Zealand has placed import restrictions on tomato seed imports from Australia after the detection of tomato brown rugose fruit virus at two South Australian growing properties.
Biosecurity NZ has spoken directly with its Australian counterparts, who have confirmed no live foot-and-mouth (FMD) disease virus has been found on food there, says deputy director general Stuart Anderson.
He says that yesterday (20 July) Australian officials said viral fragments were found on some pork product.
“They have told us that what was found in the food was not live virus, but a trace viral fragment. Viral fragments are not infectious and could not transfer live virus to another animal. It is not unusual for non-infectious viral fragments to be found in food,” Anderson says.
The product was an imported dried ‘pork floss’ product that may have been illegally imported to Australia and was being recalled as a precaution for that reason.
Any illegal product found in New Zealand would be destroyed.
Anderson says that so far there is no indication of any heightened risk to New Zealand.
“We have among the strictest import health standards and biosecurity settings in the world for pork and other meat products coming into New Zealand,” he adds.
Anderson says Pork floss can be legally imported to countries like New Zealand and Australia if it follows strict import health standards, such as the use of heat treatment.
“As an extra precaution Biosecurity New Zealand will undertake market surveillance to double check product available here is legally imported.”
He says travellers arriving in New Zealand cannot bring in uncooked meat products.
“Since FMD was found in Indonesia recently, we have stepped up our work at the border to prevent FMD arriving in New Zealand. Every passenger arrival card is examined and those from countries that have FMD (including Indonesia) are directed to a different process of questioning, baggage search and disinfection. This means that should passengers transit other airports, risks are still addressed.
“All mail products that come into New Zealand from Indonesia are x-rayed and checked by dogs. We risk assess and our quarantine officers are checking all cargo containers coming from Indonesia,” Anderson says.
“We are committed to constantly reassessing our multi-layered biosecurity settings as we have done in recent weeks with regard to FMD,” Mr Anderson said. “Those settings include risk assessments of all arrivals and cargo, 100 per cent screening of all checked in and cabin baggage, detector dogs and very strong import health standards.”
His statement comes after Agriculture and Biosecurity Minister Damien O’Connor announced further measures to protect New Zealand against FMD.
These measures include the use of foot mats with disinfecting chemicals for arrivals from Indonesia, a new awareness campaign targeting travellers before they travel to Indonesia, an on the ground audit of the PKE supply chain in Indonesia, and an FMD Readiness Taskforce.
“I call on everyone to be vigilant in playing their part to protect New Zealand’s economic security,” O’Connor said.
“We do not currently have any flights directly from Bali or elsewhere in Indonesia to New Zealand. Regardless of this, every passenger arrival card is examined and those from countries that have FMD (including Indonesia) are directed to a different process of questioning, baggage search and disinfection. This means that should passengers transit other airports, risks are still addressed.”
“We’ll continue to work closely with our Australian counterparts and primary sector partners, and I thank them for their work to raise FMD awareness.
“Our primary sector earned New Zealand a record $52.2 billion this year and is forecast to reach $56.8 billion by 2026. It’s essential that our world class biosecurity systems are continually improving so we can maintain this growth,” O’Connor said.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says the relationship between New Zealand and the US will remain strong and enduring irrespective of changing administrations.
More than 200 people turned out on Thursday, November 21 to see what progress has been made on one of NZ's biggest and most comprehensive agriculture research programmes on regenerative agriculture.
The a2 Milk Company (a2MC) says securing more China label registrations and developing its own nutritional manufacturing capability are high on its agenda.
Stellar speakers, top-notch trade sites, innovation, technology and connections are all on offer at the 2025 East Coast Farming Expo being once again hosted in Wairoa in February.
As a guest of the Italian Trade Association, Rural News Group Machinery Editor Mark Daniel took the opportunity to make an early November dash to Bologna to the 46th EIMA exhibition.
Livestock can be bred for lower methane emissions while also improving productivity at a rate greater than what the industry is currently achieving, research has shown.
OPINION: NIWA has long weathered complaints about alleged stifling of competition in forecasting, and more recently, claims of lack of…
OPINION: Adding to calls to get banks to 'back off', NZ Agri Brokers director Andrew Laming has revealed that the…