Your Reading List

Libya to accept Canadian breeding cattle

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: September 27, 2012

,

Libya’s new government has moved to re-open the country’s ports to Canadian breeding cattle, ending a nine-year ban.

The re-opened market is estimated in Canada’s livestock genetics industry to be worth up to $3 million, the Canadian government said in a release Thursday.

Rick McRonald, executive director of the Canadian Livestock Genetics Association, thanked Ottawa for "very rapid establishment of favourable animal health conditions for the export of cattle to Libya."

The move, he said, "will allow our members to respond quickly to new opportunities."

Read Also

Varroa mites are an invasive parasite that has plagued North American beekeepers since the late 1980s. Photo: MaYcaL/iStock/Getty Images

Southern California honeybees show resistance to varroa mites

Regionally-adapted honeybees in southern California show natural resistance to varroa mites, according to new research from University of California Riverside.

Libya was among many countries to shut its ports to Canadian cattle in 2003, as Canada confirmed its first domestic case of BSE in an Alberta cow.

Canada’s total exports of other agricultural and food products to Libya in 2010 were worth over $31 million, the government said.

Canada imposed economic sanctions against Libya’s former government for about six months in 2011, lifting them in early September last year to support that country’s National Transitional Council.

Libya is now transitioning to a new constitutional system of government after the ouster and death of former head of state Col. Mu’ammer Gaddafi last October.

Libyans in July this year elected a new national assembly, which in turn elected an interim president last month.

Related story:
WTO to lower entry bar for poorest countries, July 4, 2012

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications