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Canadian Pork Producers Fearful of Looming U.S. Tariffs on Canadian and Mexican Imports

A partner with Polar Pork expects the imposition of an across-the-board 25 percent tariff on U.S. imports from Canada and Mexico to have a devastating impact on all of Canadian agriculture. The United States is Canada's largest importer of processed pork products and the only importer of live Canadian hogs, accounting for five million plus live hogs per year.

Florian Possberg, a partner with Polar Pork, says we seem to have a dysfunctional federal government right now and the turmoil in Ottawa puts Canada in a weaker position than it should be.

Quote-Florian Possberg-Polar Pork:

Definitely the elephant in the room is the 25 percent tariff that Donald Trump, the new President in the U.S. has said he's going to apply across the board on imports from Canada and Mexico. He claims to have the executive orders already written up and ready to go when he's inaugurated on January 20th. That definitely would have a major impact on not only our industry but the whole Canadian economy.

Donald Trump said all through his run for president that there's too many illegal immigrants coming from both Mexico and Canada, there's too many drugs that are getting into the United States and drug overdoses are a big problem so, unless we address the immigration and the drugs coming Mr. Trump as president will put on the tariff.

It's not about our pork at all or our beef or any of the meats going into the U.S. or other agriculture products, it's all about immigration and drugs so our politicians really have to step up and solve the problem.

Possberg says Canada's farmers are helpless bystanders in this dispute and pork producers have their fingers and toes crossed that our politicians will work out some sort of an agreement and the tariff will not happen. For more visit Farmscape.Ca.

Source : Farmscape.ca

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Leman Swine Conference: Vaccination strategies to reduce PRRS virus recombination

Video: Leman Swine Conference: Vaccination strategies to reduce PRRS virus recombination

Dr. Jay Calvert, Research Director with Zoetis, recently spoke to The Pig Site’s Sarah Mikesell at the 2023 Leman Swine Conference in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA, about his conference presentation on porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) virus recombination.

“The number one problem in PRRS these days from a vaccine point of view is the emergence of new strains of PRRS. Since the beginning, we have had new strains and a lot of diversity,” said Dr. Jay Calvert. “We thought we knew it was all about mutation changes in amino acids and the individual strains over time, but they take on new characteristics.”

With the onset of more common whole genome sequencing and recombination analysis, Dr. Calvert says there is another mechanism, and recombination seems to be a key factor.