New traceability program soon to be available for Canadian sheep farmers

Program aims to help improve flock management and information availability

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Published: July 11, 2022

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The new program is a centralized system for Canadian sheep traceability.

The Canadian Sheep Federation (CSF) AgroLedger, a digital traceability program, is launching a pilot program for early adopters before its sector-wide release.

The CFS-funded program will be made available at no cost to Canadian sheep producers to bring them in line with government regulatory amendments that close the loop on full traceability.

“We understand that all the users, farmers included, are going to face a lot more work in terms of meeting regulations. The ultimate goal here is to make that easier, less complex, less work wherever possible for producers,” said CFS executive director Corlena Patterson.

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“But also, to keep traceability in the hands of the sheep farmers so that we are not at the mercy of service providers or other groups to dictate cost, price or program direction.”

To meet the increasing demands of government regulation, sheep farmers now require a centralized end-to-end supply chain traceability system for their flocks.

AgroLedger will be the underpinning system to meet traceability regulations. It will also provide producers with real-time critical disease information and valuable performance data, which will inform herd management decisions, improve performance and simplify reporting.

For example, a requirement for the Canadian Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) vaccine strategy is to track whether animals have been vaccinated. That determines protocols required to respond to an outbreak.

“But first, you need to be able to identify them, and (until now) there isn’t a system in place where you can scan an animal’s ID and know if they’ve been vaccinated,” said Patterson.

AgroLedger is an information-sharing platform capable of tracking and providing details even when the animal is sold or enters the food chain.

“We realized traceability was more than understanding when the tag was put in the ear (and) where the tag moved when it was in an animal’s ear,” Patterson said. “It’s more about understanding an animal’s history and moving that information with the animal through its life cycle.”

Patterson said AgroLedger is the foundation for a larger, cost-effective digital system that puts operation management details at producers’ fingertips. It provides rapid disease response support, simplified reporting and the ability to evolve to incorporate new regulations.

Patterson said the European Union initiated a new policy on imports of anti-microbial-treated animals and meat.

“We have no way of knowing which and what treatments an animal has had through its lifespan … to be able to meet trading partners’ expectations,” she said.

During CSF involvement in national animal health discussions, it became apparent that AgroLedger would need to incorporate diverse layers of information on animals’ history to comply with disease risk mitigation programming and import and export policy.

The program is approaching its release date and a group of early adopters has been working with the development team since the third week of June during real-world testing.

“We are going to start onboarding those who volunteered to be an early adapter in the system. We’ve met with all levels of the CFIA (Canadian Food Inspection Agency) to discuss its functionality,” said Patterson.

“So, we are pretty confident in where we sit in terms of technology, but it needs the final stamp of approval.”

About the author

Diana Martin

Diana Martin has spent several decades in the media sector, first as a photojournalist and then evolving into a multi-media journalist. In 2015, she left mainstream media and brought her skills to the agriculture sector. She owns a small farm in Amaranth, Ont. 

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