Sutton wrong to deny 100 per cent inspection
Biosecurity Minister Jim Sutton is wrong to reject 100 per cent inspection of shipping containers, as it is essential to
protect our borders from pest incursions, Green Party MP Ian Ewen-Street said today.
Mr Sutton told a Federated Farmers meeting in Wellington today, that there was no 'silver bullet' for stopping the
import of pests and diseases on shipping containers, and that throwing ever-increasing amounts of money at the problem
could not make our border impervious. "Searching every container - even if it were logistically possible, which it is
not - would not make it so," Mr Sutton said in speech notes.
Mr Ewen-Street said today that 100 per cent inspection of incoming sea containers was not only possible, it was
necessary - following the ever-increasing numbers of agriculture and forestry pests sneaking into New Zealand by this
route.
"One pest alone, such as the Asian Gypsy Moth, has the potential to wreak economic havoc on this country's primary
production sector. The Government must commit the funds - immediately - to setting up inspection teams at all the sea
container-unloading sites," Mr Ewen-Street said.
"The teams would have to be neutral, fully resourced, and trained to open and thoroughly inspect every single container
that goes to the unloading centres.
"This must not be the responsibility of the company unloading the container, as they have a conflict of interest. They
need to move goods as quickly as possible, rather than slowing them down by doing biosecurity inspections. However, this
is a necessary inconvenience," Mr Ewen-Street said.
"We also need to introduce an absolute, cast-iron requirement that we have 100 per cent offshore inspection of
agricultural machinery, cars and tyres. We know these are a big risk for carrying pests, so we should be giving them
particular attention," Mr Ewen-Street said.