Darling International Inc. (?Darling?) references The Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) Docket No. APHIS-2006-0026, the agency?s proposed
rule on Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy; Minimal-Risk Regions, Identification
of Ruminants and Processing and Importation of Commodities and the invitation to
comment on the proposed changes to 9 CFR Parts 93, 94, and 95.
Darling is one of America?s leading providers of rendering, recycling and recovery
solutions to the nation?s food industry. With processing facilities located in 14
states, Darling is one of the largest independent rendering companies and the
only publicly traded independent rendering company in the United States (US).
Darling is a member of the National Renderers Association (NRA). We are aware
of comments submitted to the Docket by the NRA and generally support their
comments.
Darling supports science based regulations and agrees with the changes
proposed by APHIS which will allow nonruminant material (such as animal protein,
offal, fat, bone, fats and oils) that is processed in BSE minimal-risk regions to be
processed in facilities that also process material derived from ruminants from the
minimal-risk region.
9 C.F.R. ? 95.4 was initially drafted in order to prevent the importation of meat and
meat products into the United States from countries that were known to have had
cases of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). ? 95.4(c) provides that meat
and meat products from a nonruminant animal ( i.e. pork and poultry), may be
imported into the United States from Canada so long as the material was
processed and stored in a facility that has not been used for the processing and
storage of materials derived from ruminant animals (e.g.: cattle). Under these
regulations, a company could import pork or poultry material from Canada so long
as the material came from a facility that did not handle or process any beef
products.
In an effort to ease restrictions on meat trade with Canada, the USDA issued the
Minimal Risk Rule in 2005. Canada is listed in 9 C.F.R. ? 94.18(a) as a BSE-
positive country, but as codified under the new Minimal Risk Rule (9 C.F.R. ?
94.19), beef products (including beef offal and other inedible parts from beef
processing) from Canadian cows can be imported into the United States, so long
as the material came from animals that were under 30 months in age at the time
of slaughter and other regulatory requirements were followed. However, when the
Minimal Risk Rule was published, the USDA neglected to amend the language
contained in ? 95.4(c) (2) (?[a]ll steps of processing and storing the material are
carried out in a foreign facility that has not been used for the processing and
storage of materials derived from ruminants that have been in any region listed in
Sec. 94.18(a) of this chapter,?) to exclude from this prohibition the processing and
storage of materials that are otherwise eligible for importation under amended ?
94.19 - specifically, pork and poultry products from facilities that also handle and
process ruminant animal meat and meat products, even if the ruminant animal
products are from animals that are under 30 months of age.
The conflict between the USDA?s Minimal Risk Rule, issued in January 2005, and
9 C.F.R. ? 95.4 has negatively impacted international trade between the US and
Canada involving the importation of meat and meat products. This regulatory
quandary has not only frustrated the ability of U.S. rendering companies to import
meat and meat products into the United States from Canada (including inedible
animal byproducts for processing into animal feed ingredients) but has also had
the unexpected consequence of hampering the importation of meat and meat
products between the US and Canada conducted by US meat purveyors
Without the changes proposed by APHIS, companies permitted to import
Canadian-derived beef bones and pork and poultry bones for inedible rendering,
under separate permits, are prohibited from importing pork and poultry bones if the
material is processed in the same facility as the importable beef bones. This
remains true even if there is a way to segregate the various operations within
Canadian processing facilities from each other, so that each operation is separate
and distinct, with no opportunity for commingling of material. This notion stems
from the USDA?s National Center for Imports and Exports (NCIE) contention that
the word ?facility,? as used in 9 C.F.R. ? 95.4(c)(2), means all parts of a building
under a single roof.
Darling applauds the agency?s efforts to resolve the inconsistencies in import
regulations which resulted from promulgation of the Minimal Risk Rule and
inadvertently restricted trade with Canadian meat processors of animal byproducts
derived from nonruminant animals, which pose little to no threat from BSE. We are
available to answer questions or to clarify our position on this important issue.
Sincerely,
C. Ross Hamilton, Ph.D.
Director Government Affairs and Technology
Comment from Calvin R Hamilton, Darling International Inc
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy; Minimal-Risk Regions, Identification of Ruminants and Processing and Importation of Commodities
View Comment
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