As part of a collaborative research effort scientists are looking to automate the washing and disinfecting of livestock trucks and trailers to speed up the process and reduce costs.
To reduce the risk of spreading PED Sask Pork, the University of Saskatchewan and the Prairie Agricultural Machinery Institute in partnership with Swine Innovation Porc are exploring the potential of automated washing and disinfecting of livestock trucks and trailers.
Dr. Terry Fonstad, an Associate Professor of Civil and Geological Engineering with the University of Saskatchewan, says one group is focusing on methods for removing organic matter from the truck and another group is examining methods for killing any remaining pathogens once the truck has been washed.
At this point we’re just at the beginning.
The Prairie Agricultural Machinery Institute, one of the collaborators with us is setting up the test stand and completing proof of concept trials with one method that we think has promise to be automated to clean the inside of the trucks and then internally here with the University and the Prairie Swine Centre and VIDO, between VIDO and the Prairie Swine Centre we’ve got some veterinarian collaborators working on this physical destruction of pathogens and getting then engineers the information they need to design a system to physically destroy the pathogens once the truck is clean.
The two projects going on now, the proof of concept and the pathogen destruction lit review, we need to have done by early May this year which will allow us to put the second phase of the proposal together on initial automation and testing of a system in the next year.
Dr. Fonstad says, once strategies have been developed for removing organic matter and for killing the pathogens, the plan would be to move forward with developing an automated system.