The rise of unregulated livestock production
The rise of unregulated livestock production in East
and Southeast Asia prompts health concerns –
UNFAO
6 February 2017, Bangkok,
Thailand – The UN’s Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) is warning that increasing demand for,
and consumption of, meat and other products of animal origin
in East and Southeast Asia are threatening the health of
millions of people and livestock as unregulated producers
race to meet the demand, often ignoring the possibility of
disease and contamination.
According to FAO figures, during the last 50 years,
consumption of meat products has skyrocketed in East Asia,
from nearly 9 kg per capita (8.7 kg) in the mid 1960’s to
50 kg per person in 2015 – an increase of more than 500
percent. The trend is set to continue, increasing a further
15 percent by the middle of this century.
Increased
prosperity in the region, mainly in China, along with
changing diets and demand for more protein-rich foods, are
largely responsible for the increases in demand and
consumption. But even without the increased consumption in
China, the region still consumed three-times more meat
during the same period. Japan, for example, increased per
capita meat consumption from nearly 33 kg in the
mid-1980’s to more than 41 kg in the late 1990’s, while
its net imports quadrupled and self-sufficiency fell by
around one-third.
“The elephant in the room is the
population explosion in the region, and not only in terms of
human population, but also animal populations in food and
agriculture,” said Dr. Juan Lubroth, FAO’s Chief
Veterinary Officer, during a meeting at the Organization’s
Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific. “The demand for
more meat products is driving an industry to have those
products ready for purchase in the markets but there are
risks associated with this.”
Under-regulated
and unmonitored – a breeding ground for new
diseases
“Much of the growth in livestock for
human consumption (in Asia and elsewhere) has been
unregulated so the systems in place to ensure food safety
and consumer confidence, the protection of human and animal
health, and prevention of existing transboundary diseases
and newly emerging ones, have not been well addressed. This
weakness in the system has its consequences that manifest
themselves in the spread of new and existing diseases,”
Lubroth said.
More than 70 percent of all transmittable
human diseases are contracted from animals (zoonosis), and
as animal production for human consumption increases in East
Asia, so too does the threat of newly emerging pathogens
that can spread between animals and people and cross borders
even before symptoms begin to appear.
“Because of the
rampant appearance of both new and old diseases, and the
easy way that they can move across borders through live
animals or commodities and across value chains, it is
important that everyone – from governments to farmers to
retailers – takes action to improve levels of disease
prevention and response. To get vaccines to livestock
producers in rural areas has a cost. And so a typical
approach to a sick animal is sell it before it dies,”
Lubroth added. “What’s really needed is for health and
agriculture authorities to work more closely together on
both human and animal health in a holistic way to address
the gaps that allow these diseases to spread. That will take
determination and resources, but it’s in everyone’s best
interests.”
FAO and partners in
action
In the Asia-Pacific region, FAO operates
the Emergency Centre for Transboundary Animal
Diseases (ECTAD) and is actively working with FAO member
countries to prevent the spread of new and old diseases and
mitigate risks.
FAO is also working with the World Health
Organization (WHO) and the World Organisation for Animal
Health (OIE) to advocate a One Health approach (e.g. actions
to holistically benefit humans, animals and the
environment). The three agencies recently launched a region-wide campaign to raise awareness
aboutantimicrobial resistance (AMR) and the
resulting ill effects seen in both humans and animals due to
the misuse and abuse of antibiotics.
Across the
Asia-Pacific region, FAO specialists work closely with
counterparts in government, in laboratories and farmer field
schools, helping to refine policies and build capacity to
improve animal health and food safety at all levels.
http://www.fao.org/asiapacific/news/detail-events/en/c/469630/