Dairy farming

The Commission welcomes the change in the rules,  which would now allow for vaccination also in Bluetongue-free areas,  thus allowing for preventive vaccination in areas that are at risk. 
The amendment of Council Directive 2000/75/EC follows the Commission’s  strategy "prevention is better than the cure" and allows more  flexibility for Member States to develop national vaccination strategies  for the prevention and control of Bluetongue. 
Under the new rules, Member States will be able to use inactivated  vaccines which are considered safer for use, since, contrary to "live  vaccines", they cannot replicate. 
These inactivated vaccines which have been developed over the last few  years, have been the preferred tool for Bluetongue control and  prevention of clinical disease in the EU. 
The number of outbreaks in the EU has been decreasing steadily over the  past years. This success is attributed primarily to the vaccination  campaigns, using inactivated vaccines, which the EU has co-financed over  the years (€150 million in 2008, and allocation of €120 million in  2009, €100 million in 2010 and €16 million in 2011).
In 2008, a total of 45,000 outbreaks were reported across the EU. That  number dropped to 1,118 in 2009, 176 in 2010 and only 39 in 2011.
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