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‘Building for the future’

Richard Lochhead

Charles Milne

Javier Dominguez

Mark Thomson

2013 Conference speakers – profiles

A strong line-up of speakers will address SAMW’s annual conference in Glasgow on April 20, each bringing a valuable depth of knowledge and experience to this year’s theme of ‘Building for the Future’.

Richard Lochhead MSP

The keynote conference speech will be given by the Scottish Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and the Environment. Since his appointment as Cabinet Secretary in 2007, Richard Lochhead has constantly demonstrated his affinity with, and support for, the rural sector, agriculture and our industry.

Charles Milne

Our second speaker is Charles Milne, Director of the Food Standards Agency in Scotland since June 2009. He is currently at the centre of the development of the proposed new Scottish food body and has been instrumental in recent changes to the administration of meat hygiene in Scottish meat plants.

Mark Thomson

Mark Thomson, Business Unit Director at Kantar Worldpanel, returns to our conference platform after an ‘interesting’ trading start to the year for the meat sector.  Looking after clients in Scotland and Ireland, he has worked with all of the main retailers, as well as their customers, within the UK meat and poultry sector.

Javier Dominguez

Finally, Javier Dominguez is a most welcome newcomer to our conference platform in his role as Deputy Veterinary Director and Head of Strategy in Hygiene and Microbiology at the Food Standards Agency (UK).  Currently heavily involved in the EU’s development of a new method of meat inspection, he is ideally placed to comment on the latest legislative progress in Brussels.

Full conference and dinner dance details

Date/Venue – April 20th – Marriott Hotel, Glasgow

Conference – 9.45am to lunch

Annual dinner& dance – starting at 7pm

Booking forms have been issued but anyone who hasn’t already received the necessary details should contact Ian Anderson, Executive Manager by email on ianranderson@btinternet.com

New Year Lunch – 2013

SAMW president, Alan McNaughton, comments on the achievements of 2012 and the challenges that lie ahead in 2013

The past 12 months have seen some vital meat industry changes being made, head-lined by the Scottish Government’s commitment in June to establish a stand-alone meat inspection service for Scotland.


With six months work on that decision already completed we’re beginning to see the framework of the new organisation starting to emerge. It was always going to be a painfully slow process, of course, but one which we believe will be worth all the effort which the Scottish food and farming industry is putting into creating the progressive and far-reaching body which we’ve all sought for so long.

Our first thought in June was to welcome the Scottish Government’s commitment to the formation of a new ‘cooperative and collaborative approach to meat inspection in Scotland’ and we continue to view it as a thoroughly refreshing prospect for SAMW’s member companies. Whole industry involvement in the process is also hugely encouraging, clearing the way for Scotland to maintain its position as a source of high quality meat, produced, processed and marketed to the highest possible standards.

There is plenty of unfinished business to keep us working in 2013, of course.

To begin with, the new stand-alone body will take time to be pushed through the necessary Scottish and UK hoops, a requirement which demands a careful balance of patience and urgency. We obviously mustn’t cut corners in setting up the new structure. That would benefit nobody. At the same time, it’s essential that momentum is maintained in setting structures, appointing people and agreeing who pays for what, and how much.

Unfinished business is also the correct phrase to apply to CAP Reform and the desperate need for an injection of targeted support to kick-start the revival of livestock supplies. The downward drift in cattle and sheep numbers is a massive negative for Scotland’s meat industry, adding to the sector’s unit costs and depriving the whole country of valuable jobs and income at a time when just about every other industry would love to have our market opportunities, both at home and abroad.

We have great natural resources, served by a top class production, processing and marketing chain. Unfortunately, the CAP mistakes of 2003, which we warned about at the time, have resulted in a steady erosion of livestock supplies, leading to missed sales opportunities, company closures and a substantial amount of lost business for Scotland plc.

We’ve been banging away at this issue all year, urging Government leaders in Edinburgh, London and Brussels, to make sure the current CAP Reform includes special measures for Scottish livestock producers. We’re not asking for financial aid to keep livestock producers and meat companies in business, however, or seeking support for an industry which is failing or unprofitable. We’re merely asking for Scottish, UK and EU politicians to invest in a sector of the economy which has the capacity to repay such confidence many times over in terms of reduced spending on imported meat, increased earnings from meat exports and a serious commitment to long-term meat sector jobs. We must also never under-estimate the contribution which livestock farming makes to environmental betterment in the uplands; it’s the existence of sufficient cattle and sheep on the hills which drives the kind of environment which makes Scotland such an attractive place.

These are powerful reasons to justify the increased support for calf and lamb production we are advocating. Furthermore,those who say ‘let market forces decide’ are being naive is they think that will result in anything other than the exporting of Scotland’s beef and lamb business to India, China , Brazil and elsewhere rapidly followed by rising costs for buying back the end products we could, and should, be producing at home.

We will keep seeking to drive this message home in 2013. Frankly, the future of Scotland’s meat and livestock chain depends on it.

Away from these two big 2012 issues, SAMW’s members have seen several significant progress points being secured over the past year.

For example, we have continued to press for the timely implementation of TSE Roadmap2 and now we’re within touching distance of the lifting of BSE testing on all healthy slaughtered cattle; have made progress by getting a review of bovine intestine and mesentery fat on to the agenda in Europe with EFSA now collecting the data for forthcoming risk assessments; have secured some changes to the FSA’s in-plant audit process and scoring system to better reflect FBO performance, with an undertaking to review other important aspects; and have managed to stave off full cost recovery of meat inspection charges until the system becomes more efficient, proportionate and risk based.

Welcome for BSE testing proposal

The proposed ending of BSE testing for healthy slaughtered cattle, on which a Defra consultation is currently running, has been welcomed by SAMW. An equivalent consultation for Scotland is due shortly.

According to the current Defra proposal, the ending of testing for healthy slaughtered cattle is expected to apply from the end of the first quarter of 2013.

“We very much welcome this proposal,” Ian Anderson, the Association’s Executive Manager, told the Meat Trades Journal. “We have said for some time, in fact, that while the need for BSE controls to be imposed quickly at the time was paramount, the authorities have been slow to wind them down even when the evidence supported that. We are very pleased therefore that this science-based proposal has come forward. It will save the Scottish industry almost half a million pounds a year at a time when the economics of beef processing are very difficult.”

Mr Anderson also took the opportunity to highlight two other areas of ‘testing concern’, adding: “We now need further proposals to re-classify most of the bovine intestine and the mesentery fat as Category 3 animal by products and end the need to remove the spinal cord from older sheep. The benefits which these measures would deliver, without compromising public health, would far outweigh those from the BSE testing of healthy slaughter cattle.”

Full Defra statement

Relying on the market to drive livestock production is ‘naive’

It’s naive to continue suggesting that traditional market conditions will deliver sustainable UK food production in the future says the Scottish Association of Meat Wholesalers (SAMW).

This comment is contained in a letter to the Secretary of State for Scotland, Michael Moore, which presents the urgent case for Scottish livestock production to be treated differently from the rest of the UK. Written by SAMW president, Alan McNaughton, the letter stresses the ‘absolutely crucial’ need for the forthcoming reform of the CAP to deliver new support measures for calf production, and possibly lamb production.

It also argues the case for Scottish agriculture to be differentiated from the rest of the UK during the CAP reform process, listing the following seven key points:

“The Less Favoured Area is 85% of Scotland while in England it’s 16% and in Wales it’s 81%,” writes Mr McNaughton.

“Grassland and rough grazing is 79% of the Scottish agricultural area while the UK figure is 61%.

“The Scottish proportion of breeding cows of a beef breed, as opposed to dairy breed, is 72%. In England it’s 40% and in Wales it’s 46%.

“The proportion of calves sired by a beef bull in Scotland is 83%. In England it’s 63% and in Wales it’s 66%.

“The percentage of total agricultural output in Scotland from beef production is 24% and from sheep production is 10%. In the UK 14% is from beef and 6% from sheep.

“The average suckler herd in Scotland is 49 cows and the average ewe flock is 262 ewes. In the UK the average is 27 cows and 215 ewes.

“The average Pillar 1 payment in Scotland is 130 euros per hectare compared with the average in the rest of the UK of 229 euros and an EU average of 268 euros. In each case the Scottish figure is only 48% of that received elsewhere in Europe.”

While acknowledging that coupled payments for Scottish beef calves exist under the Scottish Beef Calf Scheme, Mr McNaughton points out that current payments account for less than 1% of the available UK budget for coupled payments. In addition, attention is drawn to the possibility of taking up the maximum amount available to the UK for coupled schemes.

“We urge you to act in the best interests of Scottish Agriculture,” he tells the Secretary of State. “A major objective of the future CAP must be to halt this downward trend and rejuvenate beef and lamb production.

“To continue to suggest that traditional market conditions will deliver sustainable food production in the vulnerable regions of the UK is naive to say the least. I cannot emphasise enough how important it is to ensure that Scotland’s needs are met in the forthcoming EU negotiations.”

The letter was copied to DEFRA Secretary of State, Owen Paterson, George Lyon MEP, Alyn Smith MEP and Richard Lochhead MSP.

Full text of letter to Michael Moore