This Solicitation opportunity from Government of Canada was posted on December 12, 2025. The submission period has ended. Browse the details below for market research, or find similar active opportunities.
Cattle Slaughter and Transportation
Closed
2025-00656CanadaSubmission Closed
Contract Overview
Solicitation details, issuing organization, response deadlines, documents, and interested companies for this government contract opportunity.
General Info
Agency
Government of Canada → Canadian Food Inspection AgencyView Agency
NAICS
N/A
Place of Performance
*Alberta *Manitoba *Saskatchewan, CANSet-Aside
NONE
Documents
(0)AI Contract Breakdown
Uniform Contract FormatNo contract breakdown available.
Cannot generate Contract Breakdown because no documents were found from this contract's source.
Timeline
PhaseClosed
Submission Closed
Organization & Contact Information
Show more
AgencyGovernment of Canada → Canadian Food Inspection Agency
Contacts1 person available
OfficeN/A
Office AddressN/A
Contacts
Full Description
Show more
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency requires the transportation and slaughter of cattle from (TB) Tuberculosis affected farms in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
This work has been divided into 2 separate streams of work Stream 1: Slaughter and Stream 2: Transportation.
Stream 1 (Slaughter):
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) requires the slaughtering of cattle as part of the investigation to determine the presence of Bovine Tuberculosis and/or herd depopulation for confirmed cases.
Bovine TB is a reportable disease that has both significant animal and public health impacts. As such, Canada has adopted a mandatory national eradication program since 1923 to keep Canada officially free of bovine TB. Under the national eradication program, exposed cattle are ordered humanely destroyed to control the spread of the disease.
Stream 2 (transport):
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) requires the transportation of cattle from (TB) Tuberculosis affected farms to designated slaughter facilities in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
