The Badger Edge Vaccination Scheme has reopened for applications from groups wishing to carry out badger vaccination in the Edge Area of England, with £300,000 of funding set aside for the scheme in 2019.
As part of the scheme, government grants covering at least 50 percent of costs will be awarded over a period of four years. The aim of this scheme is to create a buffer zone of disease resistant badgers between the high and low risk disease areas.
Farming Minister Robert Goodwill said:
“We continue to apply different ways to tackle this devastating disease, including increased testing of cattle, improved surveillance and badger control under strict licensing criteria.
“Vaccinating badgers is one of these tools and has the potential to play an important role in preventing the spread of the disease to new areas.
“I strongly encourage interested groups to come together to develop projects that we can support financially under the Badger Edge Vaccination Scheme and help create buffer zones between areas which have the disease and those that are disease-free.”
Defra has also outlined its next steps on introduction of six monthly routine tests for all herds in the High Risk Area, as previously announced in December 2017.
This more regular testing will help spot the disease more quickly and enable any outbreak to be dealt with rapidly. Annual tests in the High Risk Area will be preserved for herds that have gone six or more years without a TB breakdown, as well as farms accredited under the Cattle Herd Certification Standards (CHeCS) scheme which includes high biosecurity measures.
A licence for supplementary badger control in Dorset has also been published today, alongside authorisations for Somerset and Gloucestershire published earlier this month. The aim of supplementary badger control is to preserve the disease control benefits which are expected from the completion of a four-year badger control operation. This licence meets Natural England’s strict licensing criteria.
Farmers can also access new disease epidemiology reports for five different operational regions of the Low Risk Area 2018. These reports provide an analysis of the bovine TB situation in the North West, the North East, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and the South East and offer insight for farmers to consider with their vets when considering how to approach risk-based trading.