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A new federal report released Friday concluded that an
animal disease outbreak coming from any of the five locations being considered
for a new high-security laboratory could be the cause of an economic disaster compared
to an outbreak from Plum Island Animal
Disease Center
in New York, where
research is now conducted.
The 1,005-page report made by the Department of Homeland
Security estimates that economic losses caused by a possible outbreak of foot-and-mouth
disease could surpass $4 billion if the lab were built near livestock herds in Kansas or Texas,
two options the Bush administration is considering. That would mean roughly $1
billion more than the federal estimates of losses blamed on a hypothetical
outbreak from its existing laboratory on Plum Island.
The U.S.
considers Athens, Ga.,
Manhattan, Kan.;
Butner, N.C.; San Antonio; and Flora,
Miss. as possible locations of a research
laboratory. If the new lab is built in Georgia,
North Carolina, or Mississippi, the losses are estimated at
$3.3 billion, the report said. If an outbreak starts at Plum Island
laboratory losses are estimated at $2.8 billion. Therefore, the report
concluded that it is more financially secure to keep the lab at its existing
location, Plum Island.
A final choice on where the laboratory will be build is
expected by late fall. Foot-and-mouth disease does not represent a threat for
humans but it could be devastating for herds of cattle, swine, lambs and sheep.
“What the EIS (environmental impact statement) concludes is that the
likelihood of release of foot-and-mouth disease is extremely low. However, in
the event that foot-and-mouth does get out, what does that mean to these
sites?” the Homeland Security official in charge of the study, Jamie Johnson of
the Office of National Laboratories, said as quoted by the Associated Press.
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