| Allen:
Still more rain. So, I'll sit here and type and watch the lightning do battle with my walnut trees... Your writings about the Canadian "queen and package" issue were pointed out by a guy who shares my concern about the risks posed to worldwide agriculture posed by the current set of WTO/SPS "rules". I agree with your general position, but I don't think anyone in Canada really "gets it" yet. Here's a shocker - I've done my homework, and I don't think that anyone in Canada has said a single thing that proves they know how to "protect" Canadian apiaries. I would not want to see a single queen exported from the US to Canada until Canada and the US agree on a specific protocol. The big tip-off is that Canadian discussions have yet to include the phrase "checks and balances". This alone implies that all discussion to date should be scrapped as "uninformed", and everyone needs to go find out about the WTO agreements Canada signed before they start over again. Canada would be foolish to import bees from anywhere (USA included) under the "exporter certification" scheme everyone keeps assuming to be the default mechanism. Canada's own experience with varroa in packages from NZ proves this. While an additional introduction of varroa was not likely viewed as a big deal, what if it had been Tropilaelaps instead? How long can Canada keep rolling those dice without losing? While we are at it, just who has the right to roll such dice for everyone? Maybe some of this will help you to develop a better presentation to the various bee organizations in Canada. Maybe not. 1) The WTO and NAFTA Agreements Make Imports Inevitable Both Canada and the USA signed the WTO and NAFTA agreements. This means that "protectionist" arguments are futile, and do nothing but discredit those who make them as irrational. Our nations must live up to their commitments to other nations. (I'm going to mostly ignore "NAFTA" and focus on "WTO" just to simplify.) Under the WTO agreements, the only way one can block imports is due a very short list of specific diseases and pests. The lists are kept by the OIE. The disease or pest must be (somehow) proven to exist in the prospective exporter country, and (again, somehow) proven to not exist in the prospective receiving county. Never mind that the task is nearly impossible and inherently incomplete, them's the rules of the game. Given that bee pests and diseases have a habit of being both unforeseen and spread by unforeseen means (via countries thought to be free of the pest/disease, by smuggling, by surprise arrival of infested bees with other cargos, or by the rare case of the surprise arrival of the pest/disease via a vector other than live bees), it follows that it may be only a matter of time until nearly everyone everywhere has every common pest and disease. Unless, of course, port-of-entry inspections are used, at least on a "statistical sample" basis. If you think about it long enough, world trade would be "easier" if everyone had all possible pests and diseases, so one wonders just how cynical the phrase "acceptable risk" is when it is made by anyone associated with the WTO. No wonder they default to "certification" as the presumed mechanism to control pests and diseases. Canada is lucky enough to have a few isolated areas that could "stay lucky" for a long time, but this won't help Canada block imports unless Canada is willing to follow WTO rules and impose strict quarantines to protect disease/pest free areas from domestic infestation. This may seem draconian, and it is. The WTO rules were set up to increase trade, not to protect against exotic invasive species and diseases. The rules force a country to beat its own producers with the same stick it uses on any other country's producers. 2) Like It Or Not, Specific Rules Apply To Canada. It should be clear to all that Canada has run out of reasonable excuses for prohibiting imports of US queens and packages. While beekeepers may concede the difference between "varroa", "varroa resistant to Apistan", and "varroa resistant to coumaphos", the OIE does not recognize anything other than "varroa". Either a country "has a pest" or "does not", and there is no middle ground that would not require the pyrrhic victory of a self-imposed internal quarantine between areas in Canada. If Canada wants the OIE to define "resistant varroa" as a new type of pest, they should start lobbying the OIE, but until then, Canada's ban is a "non-tariff barrier to trade", subject to WTO fines and sanctions. Even when a prospective exporting country "has" a pest or disease, individual exporters can "certify" that they are far away from any known incidence of the pest or disease, and continue to export. This clearly applies to New Zealand for varroa, and also applies to the US for AHB and SHB. For Canada to continue its current inconsistent stance is to risk a random US bee breeder filing a compliant that would lead to the WTO forcing Canada to accept US bees on the WTO's terms. Canada can do better than that. It appears that Canada has the time to do better, mostly because bees are never going to be a "major issue" as compared to other import/export items, and dollar-volume appears to be dictating which exports get the most attention from the WTO and the exporting nations. Even worse, under NAFTA "Chapter 11", an individual exporter can recover all the revenue he MIGHT have earned if not for the protectionist barrier. Companies in both Canada and the US have cashed in on this several times, so no one has a "moral high ground" on this slimy tactic. Its extortion. Its the rules of the game. The WTO deck is stacked in favor of the profits of a tiny number of exporting firms, and entire nations are forced to their knees at the altar of commerce. This reality renders many of the points under debate in Canada moot. Wake up and smell the (imported) coffee. 3) Canada CREATED the Planet-Wide Queen/Package Business Yes, let's "blame Canada" for the whole mess. Its all your fault! :) When Canada banned US bees, Canada became the "market" that turned New Zealand and Australia into exporters of significant numbers of live bees. Without the ban, shipping charges alone would have priced bees from the other side of the planet out of competition, and there would never have been much of an "export business" for live bees across oceans. Gee thanks! :) Once Canada found out that bees from New Zealand and Australia ranged from mediocre to terrible, export sales to Canada dropped off, and the dozen or so bee breeder/exporters whined to their governments that something needed to be done. Both countries tasked their representatives to the US with forcing the US to open its borders to their bees, since they logically saw the US as the second biggest market for large shipments of bees. As luck would have it, the representatives of these two exporters were perhaps the rudest and least professional of anyone in the entire "World Trade" game, and have played their cards very poorly. Worse yet, each country has been forced to admit that they failed to detect invasions of large and obvious external pests (varroa in NZ, and SHB in Oz) for several years while they were trumpeting their "disease free" status as if it somehow implied "better" bees. Now we have Argentina requesting US "market access" too. Laughable, but expensive. US tax dollars must be spent to slog through the process. While we would rather have the limited budgets available spent to reduce the risk of overt terrorism, we are forced to allocate resources to thinking about exported Argentinean bees. 4) The WTO "Assumes" Exporter Certification, But Allows Port-Of-Entry Inspection The WTO processes were simply not designed to address the special case of shipments of live animals. They were thinking of "commodities" and "goods". Live animals don't fit well into the process. Bees clearly cannot be "fumigated" like grain, and bees are unique for being nearly impossible to inspect or "certify" on an animal-by-animal basis like cows and sheep. If one assumes that New Zealand has the "best" biosecurity plans on the planet (and they do at least have lots of pretty paper and web pages with well-thought out plans), New Zealand's recent experience proves the following: a) Anyone who claims that they don't have a pest/disease is guessing. b) Guesses, by definition, must be assumed to be wrong. c) "Exporter Certification" is thereby a useless biosecurity tool. The UK realized this long before anyone else, and quietly implemented an inspection protocol. This protocol is tolerated by both NZ and Oz, and has proven to protect both exporters against claims that their exports were the source of specific pest and disease problems found after inspections. The "UK model" is the best starting point we have. It may not be perfect, but it is far better than other options, and is an off-the-shelf solution that has an excellent track record. We might do better, but we stand a serious risk of doing worse unless we at least look at their protocol. 5) Operate Independently of Trust Canadian opponents of imported bees have every right to fear the spread of diseases and pests. They also have every right to not trust the US to export bees that would be 100% pest-free and disease-free. No one can be trusted to do so, since everyone lacks perfect knowledge, no one has perfect processes, and the unexpected has a habit of being the rule when in comes to bees. While it is impossible to "stop imports", it is clearly possible to reject individual shipments that fail inspections. This should be all the clue anyone needs. 6) Don't Expect Continued Favors Canada somehow assumes that they are entitled to free access to the intellectual property of the USA in the form of bee "germplasm" and "breeder queens" of specific stocks that appear to have promise. This is pure fantasy. Canada banned US bees. Why should exceptions be made? Note that the WTO rules do not distinguish between live animals and "germplasm", so this is not only "fair", it has substantial precedent. It is clearly not in the best interest of the USA to give away what appears to be a "tangible technological advantage" when commercial sales of production queens and packages are banned by Canada. Expect the USA to tighten up on this, and expect the USA to continue to lead the planet in such technology. Universities have discovered that private/public partnerships are excellent cash cows, and the federal government can now grant exclusive licenses to market the work-product resulting from federal research. Supporting "the free flow of scientific information" does not imply that anyone is obligated to provide Canada with more than reprints of papers. Expect specific administrative regulations that FULLY comply with both the spirit and letter of the Canadian bee import ban, and clearly define all queens, germplasm, and live bees as "banned items". The result will soon be that the only way Canada is going to get the newer desirable bee traits is to first allow them to be sold direct to the beekeeper in the form of queens and packages. No one would have a problem providing Canadian breeders with breeder queens and other "advanced technology" if retail sales of production queens were also allowed, but the term "self sufficient" is laughable when Canada contributes nothing to US research budgets, provides no revenue to those who both pay taxes and contribute money to research funds, but still has its hand out, expecting the largess of the end products of US research. If nothing else, this alone should motivate Canadians to stop their internal bickering, and start negotiating specific port-of-entry inspection protocols. This is not "mean", it is merely "leverage". It is for Canada's own good. 7) Bees On Comb Are A Non-Issue I assumed that the concern voiced about truckloads of hives crossing into Canada were a strawman argument, but the issue keeps popping up. It should be obvious that Canada can allow imports of queens only, queens and packages, whatever. But nothing more. If Canada wants to allow migratory beekeeper movement, this would have nothing to do with queens and/or packages. In my view, it could never be practical now that diseases and pests are a consideration. 8) Unrestricted Imports Are A Non-Issue Why anyone wasted the time and money on a "study" of "unrestricted imports" is beyond me. From here, it looks like a purely political move by a faction trying to create a "FUD Factor" (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt). No one in their right mind would even consider a return to unrestricted imports. "Open borders" are a quaint but obsolete relic of the 20th Century. Only a fool would agree to export bees over an "open border", since a lack of checks and balances would expose the exporter to civil liability in the event that some pest or disease outbreak was blamed on his shipment. Its a shame that the effort was not put to something more productive, like requesting photocopies of the UK regulations for bee imports. (I requested copies, and a complete package was sent in less than a week.) 9) A National Consensus IS Required Last I checked, Alberta was a province, and had no ability to conduct its own foreign policy, or sign international trade agreements. If any province was going to try to make its own way in the world, I would have picked Quebec. Are Albertans declaring their independence from the rest of Canada? Led by beekeepers? Good luck. If not, consensus-building is clearly the only option, but a "national consensus" does not imply that all provinces have to adopt the same controls or the same protocols. Look at California, which continues to inspect every truck and every hive entering the state for possible fire-ant infestation, and realize that they are ready and willing to turn trucks around and send them home. There's nothing wrong with Saskatchewan establishing tighter controls and stricter protocols than Alberta. If they want, they can construct a set of protocols so strict that imports are simply impractical. They clearly can declare themselves "disease free" on several OIE pests and diseases, so strict controls would be appropriate. But they have to be educated until they realize that "just say no" won't fly any more. Not anywhere. Not even in Saskatchewan. 10) Smuggling Is The Sincerest Form Of Flattery While Canadian smuggling is a significant endorsement for the quality of US bees, please rein in your rebels. The smuggling incidents only hurt Albertan beekeepers' ability build confidence that they are willing to comply with whatever checks and balances are negotiated. If the US breeders who sold the bees had any brains, they would refuse to sell large consignments of bees without verifying that they will stay in the US, just to keep the pressure on the Canadians to come to the table and work out a protocol. The USA is also not without sin. But what can you expect from beekeepers except myopic short-term self-interest that results in self-inflicted gunshot wounds? :) 11) The "Precautionary Principle" Might Kill The WTO If the EU continues to wave around the "precautionary principle", the WTO will likely soon become irrelevant. In that case, Canada will still be party to NAFTA, so US/Canada trade will still be subject to "rules" that limit protectionist activity. The good news is that Canada would not be forced to negotiate with anyone other than NAFTA members. "NAFTA" is slowly expanding to include the entire continent, so maybe Argentina will soon become less laughable than they now appear. No one ever gets what they deserve. They get what they negotiate. jim Note from Allen: Jim has done a great job of summing things up, and covered pretty well all the bases. There are some points that should be made, however, that might affect the conclusions reached:
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