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THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA FUNDS NEW IMMUNIZATION DRUG TO PREVENT SHIPPING FEVER IN CATTLE

Saskatoon (Saskatchewan), April 13, 2006 - A $600,000 vaccine project being funded through Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada's Advancing Canadian Agriculture and Agri-Food (ACAAF) Program will provide Canada's beef producers with a new drug to help protect their cattle from shipping fever.

"I am pleased to be making this announcement as it demonstrates this government's ongoing commitment to our cattle industry," said Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food and Minister for the Canadian Wheat Board Chuck Strahl. "Effective immunization against disease will provide beef producers with the support they need to meet the demands of the marketplace, both at home and abroad."

The innovative project, spearheaded by the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO) at University of Saskatchewan, will test how a stimulant called CpG improves the immune system response of animals to vaccines. The stimulant, already in clinical trials to treat human diseases, is being tested as an additive to cattle vaccines to enhance their protection against bovine respiratory disease, commonly known as shipping fever.

"Vaccination remains the most cost-effective method of reducing animal suffering and death," said Dr. George Mutwiri of VIDO. "This is becoming even more important as antibiotic disease resistance increases. The economic impact of bovine respiratory disease is immense, and we hope that clinical trials will confirm that this will provide benefits to producers and, ultimately, consumers."

Funding for the VIDO project is being provided through the collaboration of ten industry councils that manage the ACAAF program in their respective provinces and territories. The co-ordination and leadership for the project is provided by the Saskatchewan ACAAF industry council, the Advancing Canadian Agriculture and Agri-Food Saskatchewan (ACAAFS) Committee of the Saskatchewan Council for Community Development (SCCD).

"This project is important to the Canadian cattle industry and it will provide producers, packers and processors with industry-led solutions to respond to current and emerging issues which will assist the industry in becoming more viable," said Louis Hradecki, ACAAFS Committee Chair. "There is more scrutiny on the cattle industry after the BSE crisis, and the need for innovation is great. It is through collective efforts such as this that Canadian producers and value-added processors will be able to meet the challenges ahead."

For more information on ACAAF, please visit http://www.agr.gc.ca/acaaf/. To learn more about VIDO, please visit their Web site at: http://www.vido.org. Information on the SCCD is available at: http://www.sccd.sk.ca/acaafs/.

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For more information, please contact:

Media Relations
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
613-759-7972 or 1-866-345-7972

VIDO, University of Saskatchewan
Dr. George Mutwiri
(306) 966-1511

Backgrounder

The Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO)

The Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO) is a research institute at the University of Saskatchewan. VIDO's mandate is to serve the Canadian livestock and poultry industry by conducting animal health related research, communicating livestock management techniques and information, and facilitating the transfer of technology for international commercial development.

Shipping Fever Pneumonia

Shipping fever pneumonia (also known as Bovine Respiratory Disease) is a respiratory disease of cattle. Primarily associated with calves assembled into large feedlots, the disease typically results in morbidity 35 percent of the time and mortality 5-10 percent of the time.

Shipping fever pneumonia can occur with or without infection and is generally aggravated by stress factors like transportation.

The VIDO project is researching ways in which a novel immune stimulant, CpG ODN, improves the speed and level of immunization against respiratory disease when combined with a vaccine. VIDO has also discovered a manner in which vaccines can be delivered effectively without using needles.

ACAAF Funding

The VIDO project's total cost is $600,000, split ten ways between the ACAAF industry councils. The following is a breakdown of the amount of funds committed by each council:

British Columbia: B.C. Investment Agriculture Foundation - $30,300

Alberta: Agriculture and Food Council - $232,260

Saskatchewan: Advancing Canadian Agriculture and Agri-Food Saskatchewan (ACAAFS) Committee of the Saskatchewan Council for Community Development Inc. (SCCD) - $116,880

Manitoba: Manitoba Rural Adaptation Council - $59,340

Ontario: Agricultural Adaptation Council - $91,020

Quebec: Conseil pour le développement de l'agriculture du Québec (CDAQ) and Fonds de développement de la transformation alimentaire (FDTA) - $58 140

Newfoundland and Labrador: Newfoundland and Labrador Agri-Adapt Council Inc. - $360

New Brunswick: New Brunswick Agriculture Council Inc./Conseil agricole du Nouveau-Brunswick Inc. - $3,780

Nova Scotia: Agri-Futures Nova Scotia - $4,380

Prince Edward Island: PEI ADAPT Council (Adaptation Development Agricultural Production Technology Council) - $3,540

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