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The Rural Voice, 1982-09, Page 22FARM NEWS Good animal health doubles production By the year 2000, economists say Canada can double its production of beef and pork. That is the goal for livestock found in Agriculture Canada's Agri -food Strategy. "That is an opportunity, not a guaran- tee," emphasized Dr. G.I. Trant, the Senior Assistant Deputy Minister of the Department. To achieve the goal, he stressed all facets of agribusiness asso- ciated with livestock will have to co- operate. Speaking on behalf of the new Agri- culture Canada Deputy Minister, J.P. Connell, Trant added that dairy and poultry production should grow in res- ponse to domestic population growth - by about 30% by the year 2000. "Some of the increased production will come about by the addition of livestock For winter wheat seed, call us FIRST Your first call for winter wheat seed should be to a FIRST LINE SEEDS shareholder/grower. • FREDRICK and GORDON varieties • CERTIFIED, REGISTERED or FOUNDATION seed available • 25 kg paper bags or bulk pick up at some locations • Discounts for volume and/or bulk orders When you call for wheat seed, call FIRST LINE first. FIRST LINE SEEDS LTD. R.R. #2, GUELPH ONTARIO, CANADA N1H 6H8 For wheat seed or more information, contact: John Hazlit! Goderich [519] 524-7474 Bev Hill Varna [519] 482-3218 H.J.A. Farms Ltd. Hugh Scott Staffa [519] 345-2886 Gordon Strang Exeter [519] 235-1466 PG. 22 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1982 numbers," predicts Trant, "but a large part will occur as a result of improve- ments in output per animal." Citing pork, he says efficiency is improving by about three percent per year from advances in breeding, management, nutrition and health standards. In the beef sector, the challenge may be greater because, "production may move to more margi:ial land as food grains replace feed and forage production in many area." Given the nation's land resources, the department is confident that the goal is realistic and achievable. The real nucleus to success will be in improvements to herd health, he con- tended. "We would lose one half of our livestock and poultry if it weren't for the kinds of products that member companies of the CAHI provide to the nations' farmers! "Even with the excellent overall health of the national herd, we are losing about $500 million a year to livestock diseases," added Trant. "1 think that everybody concerned with the industry would agree that the best long-term approach to herd health is preventative medicine." To this end, he told the animal health experts that, while antibiotics will con- tinue to play a vital role in animal health, the real future lies in the development of effective disease -preventing vaccines. "The breakthroughs that have been made in the past few years, with the discovery of scours vaccines, and more recently with a sub -unit foot and mouth vaccine, and good examples of what can be done with the new tools of biotech- nology." Update on OFAAP Donald C. MacDonald, the Agriculture and Food Critic gave a speech recently at the NDP picnic. In his speech he brought the farmers up to date on the success of the Ontario Farm Adjustment Assistance Program (OFAAP). This program was designed to help around 5,000 farmers with a $60 million budget. To date, there have been 1,118 farmers accepted under either the interest defferal, interest rebate or government guaranteed lines of credit. The total for six months runs between $13 and $14 million dollars. This excludes the administration cost of this program. To use the original $60 million allocated to this program, there will need to be a large number accepted in the next six months.