Market access is everything in the swine industry. Health certificates unlock premium domestic and international markets worth billions of dollars annually. These certificates enable producers to command higher prices and access buyers who demand certified disease-free pork.
A health certificate for pigs is an official veterinary document that certifies disease-free status. These certificates verify regulatory compliance for animal movement. They are issued by accredited veterinarians and endorsed by federal authorities like the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) or the United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (USDA APHIS).
Without proper health certification, your pigs face serious restrictions. They cannot legally cross state lines or provincial borders. They cannot enter processing facilities or access export markets. This makes swine health certificates essential for business operations.
This comprehensive guide covers three critical certification types. Interstate movement certificates enable domestic transport between regions. Export health certificates facilitate international trade and premium market access. Pork quality assurance certification programs verify on-farm food safety practices and production standards.
You’ll also learn about specialized programs that expand market opportunities. The Canadian ractopamine-free pork certification program opens doors to restricted export markets. These markets include the European Union, China, and Russia, which prohibit ractopamine residues.
Regulations are constantly changing across the industry. Buyer requirements are becoming more stringent every year. Disease outbreaks can trigger emergency certification requirements overnight. Countries frequently update their import protocols based on evolving disease situations.
Successful swine operations build health certification into their production planning. This proactive approach prevents costly shipment delays. It maintains continuous market access throughout the year. It also protects your operation’s reputation when disease challenges arise in your region.
What is a Swine Health Certificate?
Core Definition
A swine health certificate is an official document issued by licensed veterinarians. It certifies the health status of pigs before movement. The certificate provides legal documentation that animals meet disease-free requirements.
These certificates are required for multiple scenarios throughout the industry. Interstate movement between states or provinces requires certification. Export sales to international markets demand comprehensive health documentation. Premium buyers mandate certified disease-free sources for their supply chains.
Every swine health certificate includes critical information for traceability. Individual animal identification numbers enable tracking throughout the supply chain. Laboratory disease testing results verify freedom from specific pathogens. Veterinary inspection findings document clinical health assessment by qualified professionals.
Health certificates have strict time validity periods that producers must understand. Most certificates remain valid for 30 days from issuance. Some export markets require inspection within 14 days before shipment. Certain high-risk destinations mandate certification within 24 hours of departure.
Types of Health Certificates
Interstate certificates enable domestic movement across jurisdictional boundaries. These are formally called Certificates of Veterinary Inspection (CVI) in the United States. Each destination state or province has specific entry requirements. These requirements dictate which diseases must be tested and what inspection protocols apply.
Export health certificates enable international trade with foreign countries. They require significantly more documentation than domestic certificates. Testing protocols are more extensive and quarantine periods are longer. These certificates must meet the specific sanitary requirements of destination countries.
Pre-slaughter certification documents health status immediately before processing. Many premium buyers require these certificates for quality assurance. Specialty processors mandate pre-slaughter certificates to verify disease-free status. This ensures product quality meets their customer requirements and brand standards.
Special disease situation certificates address specific outbreak scenarios. During disease events like Senecavirus A (SVA) outbreaks, additional certification is required. These certificates verify freedom from the disease of concern. They enable continued market access for unaffected operations during regional outbreaks.
Why Health Certificates Matter
Market Access Benefits:
- Premium buyers pay $5-15 per hundredweight above commodity prices
- Show pig buyers require certified health status before purchase
- Breeding stock customers demand comprehensive disease testing
- Export markets provide access to billions in international sales
Regulatory Compliance Protection:
- Prevents quarantines and business interruptions
- Avoids fines ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per violation
- Eliminates potential criminal charges for repeat violations
- Maintains business license and operating permits
Industry Protection Value:
- Supports biosecurity during disease outbreaks
- Provides traceability during disease investigations
- Protects industry reputation with consumers
- Enables rapid containment of emerging diseases
Business Continuity Insurance:
- Maintains market access during regional outbreaks
- Proves animals originated from certified sources
- Prevents movement restrictions during emergencies
- Protects customer relationships and contracts
Swine Health Certificate Requirements
Testing Requirements
Brucellosis testing is mandatory for most interstate movement and export certification. The Buffered Plate Antigen Test (BPAT) is the standard screening method. Testing must be conducted within 30 days before certification. All breeding-age animals require negative test results before movement authorization.
Pseudorabies testing requirements vary by destination but follow consistent protocols. ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay) or virus neutralization tests are accepted. Testing must occur within 30 days of the movement date. Many states maintain pseudorabies-free status and require testing before entry.
PRRS (Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome), PCV2 (Porcine Circovirus Type 2), and Influenza testing protocols are increasingly common. These tests verify freedom from economically significant diseases. Negative results demonstrate superior herd health management to buyers. They enable access to restricted markets with stringent health requirements.
Salmonella testing has become mandatory for specific destination countries. Export health certificates for Asian and European markets often require verification. Salmonella culture testing or PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) detection methods are accepted. Tests verify that animals are not shedding this foodborne pathogen.
Physical Inspection Requirements
Veterinary inspection must occur within specific timeframes before movement. Most international shipments require inspection within 14 days of export. Some countries require inspection within 24 hours of departure. The examining veterinarian conducts clinical examination of all certified animals.
Inspection Protocol Checklist:
- Body condition assessment for transport fitness
- Respiratory function evaluation for infectious disease signs
- Mobility evaluation for lameness or neurological symptoms
- Skin examination for lesions or external parasites
- Temperature measurement when clinical signs are present
- Lymph node palpation for swelling indicating infection
Clinical examination protocols assess fitness for transport and health status. Veterinarians evaluate body condition, respiratory function, and mobility. They check for clinical signs suggesting disease. Animals showing signs of illness cannot receive certification until recovery.
Assessment of freedom from specific diseases is critical for certification. Veterinarians must certify freedom from African Swine Fever (ASF). Classical Swine Fever (CSF) status must be verified. Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) and Swine Vesicular Disease (SVD) freedom is required. Certification is based on clinical examination and knowledge of premises disease history.
Identification Requirements
Official ear tags with unique identification numbers are mandatory. Tags must meet ISO 11784 international standard specifications. These tags provide permanent identification throughout the animal’s lifetime. They enable traceability during disease investigations and recall situations.
Approved identification indicators under National Livestock Identification programs ensure consistency. Canada’s Canadian Livestock Identification Program establishes tag requirements. The USA’s National Animal Identification System defines acceptable identification methods. These programs establish requirements for tag design, number format, and application protocols.
Acceptable Identification Methods:
- Official ear tags (primary method for most certificates)
- Tattoos (acceptable for breeding swine in some jurisdictions)
- Brand numbers (used for breeding animals with permanent marks)
- RFID tags (required for high-value breeding stock exports)
- Backup microchip implants (for animals valued over $5,000)
Tattoos or brand numbers remain acceptable for breeding swine in specific situations. These permanent marking methods provide backup identification when tags are lost. They support ownership verification for high-value breeding animals. Most jurisdictions accept tattoos in combination with ear tags.
RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags and backup microchips are increasingly used. High-value animals entering export markets often require electronic identification. Electronic identification enables rapid reading at international borders. It provides redundant identification when destination countries require multiple tags.
Documentation Components
Individual animal identification numbers must be listed for every certified animal. For large shipments, animals may be identified by lot number. Lot identification is acceptable when animals share common testing status. Each identification must correspond to test results and inspection findings.
Number of animals covered must match pen counts and loading lists. Discrepancies between certificate numbers and loaded animals trigger rejection. Destination checkpoints verify counts against certificate documentation. Mismatches require costly return shipments or emergency re-certification.
Required Certificate Information:
- Purpose of movement (breeding, slaughter, exhibition)
- Points of origin with complete farm addresses
- Destination facility address and GPS coordinates
- Consignor contact information and signatures
- Consignee contact information and facility details
- Disease-free status declarations by veterinarian
- Testing laboratory names and accreditation numbers
- Test dates and reference numbers for traceability
Purpose of movement determines testing requirements and certificate validity. Breeding animal certificates typically require extensive disease testing. Slaughter animal certificates focus on transport fitness and reportable diseases. Exhibition animals may need additional vaccination documentation and shorter validity periods.
Points of origin and destination must be precisely specified. Complete farm addresses enable proper traceability and verification. GPS coordinates support biosecurity planning and outbreak investigations. Premises identification numbers link certificates to official farm registrations.
Disease-free status declarations certify freedom from specific diseases. These declarations are based on testing results and clinical inspection. They create legal liability for certifying veterinarians and producers. This emphasizes the importance of accurate testing and honest disease history reporting.
Common Certificate Types
Interstate Movement Certificates
Certificate of Veterinary Inspection (CVI) requirements vary significantly between jurisdictions. Each destination state or province publishes specific entry requirements. These requirements detail which diseases require testing. They specify inspection timeframes and certificate endorsement procedures.
State Entry Requirement Variations:
| Movement Type | Testing Required | Inspection Window | Validity Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breeding Stock (US) | Brucellosis, Pseudorabies | Within 30 days | 30 days |
| Slaughter Pigs (US) | Visual inspection only | Within 72 hours | 10 days |
| Exhibition Animals | Brucellosis, vaccinations | Within 7 days | 30 days |
| Canadian Breeding | Brucellosis, PRRS | Within 30 days | 30 days |
State-specific entry requirements reflect local disease concerns and regulatory priorities. States with high-value breeding stock industries impose stricter requirements. States focused on slaughter pig production have simpler protocols. Border states often have reciprocal agreements simplifying routine movements.
Time validity and inspection windows create planning challenges. Most CVIs remain valid for 30 days from issuance. Animals must be inspected within specific timeframes before movement. Some states require inspection within 72 hours of departure. This necessitates precise coordination between testing, inspection scheduling, and transport logistics.
Export Health Certificates
Country-specific disease testing protocols reflect destination market priorities. Each importing country publishes detailed sanitary requirements. These requirements specify which diseases must be tested. They define approved testing methods and acceptable laboratories. Requirements frequently change based on outbreak situations and trade negotiations.
Export Testing Timeline Example:
- Day 1-30: Conduct all required disease testing
- Day 31-35: Receive laboratory results and official reports
- Day 36-40: Schedule veterinary inspection within required window
- Day 41: Veterinary inspection and certificate completion
- Day 42-44: Submit certificate to CFIA or USDA for endorsement
- Day 45: Receive endorsed certificate for shipment
- Day 46: Animals depart for destination country
Extended quarantine and monitoring periods are common for breeding stock exports. Some countries require 30-day quarantine with repeated testing. These protocols verify sustained disease-free status before import. Extended quarantine significantly increases export costs and requires dedicated facilities.
Multiple endorsements from federal veterinary services validate international standards. Export health certificates require endorsement by CFIA or USDA APHIS veterinarians. They verify that testing, inspection, and documentation meet requirements. This endorsement process can take 2-5 business days. Advance planning prevents shipment delays and missed market windows.
Destination country sanitary requirements extend beyond animal health testing. Transport conditions must meet specific standards. Processing requirements may apply before export. Documentation procedures vary by country. Some countries require sealed transport vehicles and continuous government supervision.
Canadian Ractopamine-Free Pork Certification
Growing market demand for ractopamine-free pork reflects consumer preferences worldwide. The Canadian ractopamine-free pork certification program enables critical market access. It opens doors to the European Union market worth billions. China and Russia also require ractopamine-free certification for imports.
Documentation requirements for feed records create rigorous traceability standards. Producers must maintain detailed records covering the entire production cycle. These records prove that animals never received ractopamine-containing feed. Feed suppliers must provide certificates of analysis for all delivered feed.
Ractopamine-Free Certification Requirements:
- Complete feed records from birth to slaughter
- Feed supplier certificates of analysis (ractopamine-free status)
- Third-party audit of feed manufacturing processes
- Random tissue sampling at processing facilities
- Surprise farm record inspections by auditors
- Non-compliance results in immediate program suspension
Testing protocols for verification include random tissue sampling at processing. Third-party auditors conduct surprise inspections of feed manufacturing facilities. They review farm records to verify program compliance. Non-compliance results in program suspension and loss of market access.
Market access to restricted countries justifies additional documentation and compliance costs. Ractopamine-free certification enables access to premium markets. These markets consistently pay $5-15 per hundredweight premiums. This significantly improves profit margins for participating producers.
Pork Quality Assurance Certification Programs
PQA Plus certification establishes industry standard production practices for food safety. This comprehensive program covers proper medication use and residue avoidance. It includes animal handling, biosecurity protocols, and environmental stewardship. Producer certification requires training completion and site assessment by auditors.
Transport Quality Assurance (TQA) ensures proper handling during transport. TQA certification verifies that drivers understand loading density requirements. Temperature management and emergency handling procedures are covered. Many packers require TQA certification for all haulers delivering to facilities.
Quality Assurance Program Comparison:
| Program | Scope | Audit Frequency | Certification Cost | Market Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PQA Plus | On-farm practices | Every 3 years | $150-300 | Most major packers |
| TQA | Transport handling | Every 3 years | $75-150 | Premium buyers |
| Organic Certification | Production system | Annual | $500-2,000 | Organic markets |
| GAP Certification | Animal welfare | Annual | $1,000-5,000 | Retail programs |
Site assessment and management practice verification occur during third-party audits. Auditors evaluate facilities and review production records. They interview personnel and observe animal handling practices. Audit findings identify improvement opportunities and verify buyer requirement compliance.
Third-party audit requirements provide independent verification of program compliance. Major pork buyers increasingly require certified third-party audits. They no longer accept producer self-assessments alone. Independent audits provide consumer credibility and protect buyers from liability.
The Health Certificate Process
Step 1: Pre-Certification Preparation (30-60 Days Before Movement)
Schedule testing 30-60 days before your intended movement date. This allows adequate time for sample collection and laboratory analysis. Standard laboratory turnaround time is 3-5 business days. Last-minute testing creates unnecessary stress and increases shipment delay risks.
Ensure proper animal identification systems are in place before testing begins. All animals requiring certification must have approved official identification. Tags must meet destination requirements and be properly applied. Applying tags immediately before testing prevents identification mismatches between animals and samples.
Pre-Certification Preparation Checklist:
- ☐ Verify destination state/country entry requirements
- ☐ Schedule testing appointment with approved laboratory
- ☐ Apply official ear tags to all animals needing certification
- ☐ Organize vaccination and treatment records for veterinary review
- ☐ Book accredited veterinarian inspection appointment
- ☐ Coordinate transport scheduling with certificate validity period
- ☐ Verify endorsement requirements and processing time
Maintain vaccination and treatment records in organized, accessible formats. Veterinarians need complete health histories to accurately certify disease-free status. They must verify that withdrawal periods have been satisfied. Missing records can prevent certification and delay shipments.
Step 2: Laboratory Testing (30 Days Before Movement)
Submit samples to approved laboratories authorized by regulatory authorities. Not all commercial laboratories are approved for official certification testing. Verify laboratory approval status with your veterinarian before submission. Check with the destination state or country for their approved laboratory list.
Allow adequate time for results with standard turnaround of 3-5 business days. Rush testing may be available at additional cost. Planning ahead eliminates unnecessary rush fees and reduces stress. Unexpected positive results may require follow-up testing or epidemiological investigation.
Testing Timeline Management:
- Submit samples 30 days before movement for standard processing
- Allow 5-7 business days for Brucellosis and Pseudorabies results
- Allow 3-5 business days for PRRS, PCV2, and Influenza results
- Request rush processing only when absolutely necessary
- Build in 3-5 day buffer for potential re-testing needs
- Schedule second testing appointment if initial results are questionable
Obtain official test reports for certificate attachment from the laboratory. Informal result notifications by phone are insufficient for certification. Official laboratory reports must include proper letterhead and accreditation numbers. Authorized signatures are required documentation for regulatory review.
Step 3: Veterinary Inspection (Within Required Timeframe)
Schedule inspection within the timeframe specified by destination requirements. Some certificates require inspection within 14 days of movement. Others mandate inspection within 24-72 hours of departure. Coordinate inspection timing with transport scheduling carefully. Certificate validity must match your actual movement date.
Ensure all animals are accessible for examination in appropriate facilities. Facilities must be well-lit and allow safe handling. Veterinarians must physically examine every animal on the certificate. Overcrowded pens or inadequate lighting delay inspection and may prevent certification.
Inspection Day Requirements:
- All certified animals gathered in inspection facilities
- Adequate lighting for clinical examination
- Safe handling equipment and facilities available
- Complete health and treatment records organized
- Recent test results printed and available
- Movement paperwork prepared for veterinarian review
- Backup animals identified in case any fail inspection
Provide complete health and treatment records for veterinary review. Certificates require veterinarians to certify withdrawal period compliance. Missing treatment records prevent certification immediately. This requires extended waiting periods before re-inspection is possible.
Step 4: Certificate Issuance and Endorsement (2-5 Days)
Veterinarian completes and signs the certificate after successful inspection. They verify that all testing and identification requirements are satisfied. The veterinarian’s signature creates legal certification of health status. Electronic certificates are increasingly accepted but require secure digital signatures.
Submit to regulatory authority for endorsement when required. Federal veterinarians review certificate completeness and verify testing compliance. They confirm all requirements are satisfied before endorsement. CFIA endorsement typically takes 2-3 business days. USDA APHIS endorsement typically takes 3-5 business days.
Endorsement Process Steps:
- Veterinarian submits completed certificate to CFIA or USDA office
- Federal veterinarian reviews for completeness and accuracy
- Testing laboratory reports are verified for proper accreditation
- Endorsement stamp and signature are applied to certificate
- Endorsed certificate is returned to submitting veterinarian
- Original endorsed certificate is provided to producer/shipper
- Copies are distributed to hauler and destination facility
Pay required endorsement fees according to published fee schedules. Endorsement fees vary based on certificate type and animal numbers. Fees differ by destination requirements as well. Some jurisdictions waive fees for small shipments. International endorsements may cost $100-500 for large consignments.
How Amara Bio Supports Health Certification
Export Readiness Subscription
Specifically designed for operations requiring regular export certification, Amara Bio’s Export Readiness Subscription streamlines the process. This comprehensive program provides regularly scheduled testing for continuous export eligibility. It eliminates the stress of last-minute testing coordination for producers.
The subscription includes PRRS, PCV2, and Influenza testing timed for certification requirements. Testing schedules are customized to your export shipping calendar. Results are always available when veterinarians need them. This ensures smooth certificate preparation and regulatory endorsement without delays.
Export Readiness Subscription Benefits:
- Regularly scheduled testing prevents certification lapses
- Results available when veterinarians prepare certificates
- Automated testing reminders eliminate missed windows
- Customized schedules match your export commitments
- Early disease detection enables proactive herd health management
- Reduced per-test costs through subscription pricing
Predictable testing schedules ensure certificates never lapse due to expired results. Automated testing reminders alert you before critical testing windows close. Pre-scheduled sample collection appointments eliminate last-minute scrambling. This prevents disrupting export commitments and disappointing international customers.
Fastest Turnaround in Canada
Results in less than 24 hours versus standard 3-5 days enable rapid certification. This speed advantage transforms export planning from a weeks-long process. It creates a nimble operation that capitalizes on sudden market opportunities. Time-sensitive export opportunities become accessible to operations with rapid testing.
Speed advantage prevents shipment delays and missed market windows. When export buyers need immediate delivery for processing schedules, fast results deliver. For retail commitments on tight deadlines, rapid testing ensures success. Your operation meets deadlines that competitors without fast testing cannot match.
Rapid Turnaround Advantage:
- Less than 24 hours vs standard 3-5 business days
- Enables emergency export opportunities worth premium prices
- Prevents $5,000-20,000 in lost sales from missed deadlines
- Provides time to address positive findings before export dates
- Supports last-minute buyer requests during seasonal demand
- Enables shipment adjustments based on market price changes
Quick results allow time to address any positive findings. If unexpected positive results occur, rapid turnaround provides days for action. This enables biosecurity measure implementation and additional testing. You can adjust shipment plans without losing the sale entirely.
Comprehensive Testing Panels
Single sample tests for PRRS, PCV2, Influenza A, and Mycoplasma reduce sampling complexity. One blood sample provides results for multiple disease organisms. This eliminates repeated animal handling and multiple sampling sessions. Labor costs decrease and biosecurity risks are minimized.
Multi-pathogen detection from single samples is cost-effective compared to individual tests. Bundled testing panels reduce per-test costs significantly. They provide comprehensive disease surveillance simultaneously. This meets requirements for diverse export markets with different protocols.
Multi-Pathogen Panel Advantages:
- One sample tests for 4+ pathogens simultaneously
- 40-60% cost reduction vs individual pathogen tests
- Single handling event reduces animal stress
- Results meet multiple destination country requirements
- Flexibility to redirect shipments based on market conditions
- Comprehensive herd health surveillance data
Results meet requirements for multiple destination countries simultaneously. This provides flexibility to redirect shipments based on market conditions. When original buyers cancel orders, comprehensive panels enable adaptation. Better prices in alternative markets become accessible without additional testing.
ISO 17025 Certification
ISO 17025 certification ensures test results meet international recognition standards. This internationally recognized quality standard validates testing competence. It confirms measurement accuracy that foreign regulatory authorities trust. Results are accepted by importing countries without additional questioning.
Required for many export market certifications, ISO 17025 accreditation eliminates regulatory challenges. It prevents shipment delays at international borders. Countries requiring ISO-accredited laboratories reject non-accredited results immediately. This forces costly re-testing and extended quarantine periods.
ISO 17025 Benefits:
- International recognition by regulatory authorities worldwide
- Eliminates re-testing requirements at destination countries
- Validates measurement accuracy and testing competence
- Required for most premium export markets
- Provides confidence in reported results
- Supports seamless border clearance processes
ISO accreditation provides credibility with foreign regulatory authorities reviewing certificates. Regulatory veterinarians are familiar with ISO 17025 standards. They readily accept accredited laboratory results for endorsement. Additional verification or re-testing is not requested.
Cloud-Based Documentation
Digital test reports accessible anywhere, anytime eliminate document management headaches. Veterinarians preparing certificates access current test results from their clinics. They don’t wait for faxed reports that get lost. Producers review historical data from farm offices during audits.
Historical testing records support disease outbreak investigations and biosecurity audits. Complete testing histories demonstrate consistent herd health management. They prove disease-free status when questions arise. This supports international negotiations and domestic movement challenges.
Cloud Documentation Features:
- 24/7 access to test results from any device
- Historical records dating back multiple years
- Easy sharing with veterinarians via secure links
- Instant forwarding to federal endorsement offices
- Automated backup prevents record loss
- Audit trail for quality assurance compliance
Easy sharing with veterinarians and regulatory authorities streamlines endorsement. Electronic reports can be instantly forwarded to federal veterinarians. This eliminates delays caused by lost faxes or mailed reports. Reports arrive before shipment deadlines without postal service delays.
Expert Consultation
Guidance on country-specific testing requirements prevents costly certification mistakes. Amara Bio’s technical team stays current on changing import protocols. They provide clear recommendations about tests required for specific destinations. This guidance saves money and prevents shipment rejections.
Protocol recommendations for certification preparation optimize testing timing. Expert advice ensures testing schedules align with certification validity periods. Schedules match shipment dates precisely to prevent expired results. This prevents expensive re-testing that delays export commitments.
Expert Support Services:
- Country-specific testing requirement interpretation
- Protocol recommendations for certification timelines
- Test result interpretation for veterinary decisions
- Regulatory change notifications and updates
- Biosecurity consultation for positive results
- Troubleshooting for complex certification scenarios
Interpretation of test results for veterinary decision-making clarifies ambiguous results. Expert interpretation identifies when additional testing is necessary. It determines when epidemiological investigation is required. This prevents misunderstandings leading to inappropriate certification decisions.
Conclusion
Health certificates are the gateway to premium markets rewarding superior herd health. Mastering certification requirements transforms health documentation from compliance burden into competitive advantage. Your operation differentiates itself in increasingly sophisticated pork markets demanding verification.
Rapid, reliable testing support is essential for maintaining continuous market access. Testing delays taking days rather than hours create unnecessary bottlenecks. They prevent capitalizing on sudden opportunities and premium pricing windows. Nimble operations with fast testing capture opportunities that slower competitors miss.
Amara Bio’s Export Readiness Subscription provides comprehensive testing specifically designed for export success. Rapid turnaround times enable emergency opportunities worth premium prices. Expert support eliminates the stress of coordinating laboratories and interpreting regulations. This integrated approach streamlines certification and prevents delays.
Proactive certification planning prevents emergencies and positions your operation as reliable. Premium buyers reward consistency with long-term contracts and better pricing. Schedule a consultation with Amara Bio today to discuss Export Readiness Subscription benefits. Streamline your certification process, reduce delays, and unlock access to the world’s most profitable pork markets.

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