@bbsrcmedia
  @bbsrcmedia
BBSRC | Animal virus research: an amazing new laboratory @bbsrcmedia | Uploaded January 2012 | Updated October 2024, 9 hours ago.
See the full video feature here: ht.ly/R2UiT

"Now if you want to come and film these areas you'll have to take your camera out via the quarantine facility... which means it may be fumigated and lost forever."

Dr Michael Johnson, Head of Estates at the Institute for Animal Health (IAH), Pirbright, is describing how this will be the last time anyone takes a video camera into the new IS4L laboratories, the video of which can be seen above.

Completed on budget, this new high-tech interim laboratory is packed with all the cutting-edge equipment and to allow people to deal safely with deadly animal viruses. "We need high containment-level laboratories that are fit for purpose," says Johnson. "We work with the most dangerous animal pathogens and need the right facilities to do the work effectively."

Costing £10M and funded by BBSRC and Defra, IS4L stands for Interim SAPO (Specified Animal Pathogens Order 1998) 4 Laboratory [4 meaning Containment Level 4 -- the highest] and is central to IAH's strategic priorities to enhance and protect animal health and ensure food security for the UK and the wider world.


See more BBSRC videos here: bbsrc.ac.uk/news/videos

See BBSRC News for the latest news, features and events: bbsrc.ac.uk/news

Follow BBSRC on Twitter: twitter.com/bbsrc
Animal virus research: an amazing new laboratoryHealthier milk on the high streetHow data can help us understand farmings impact on climate: Hadewij Sint from Rothamsted ResearchSpeeding up drug discoveryPlants vs #Explosives: How #GeneticModification is Cleaning up Land Contaminated with #MunitionsHarvest 2050 - with subtitlesThe BEEHAVE Model: Understanding the Environmental Factors Impacting #Honeybee Colonies50 Years of the Rothamsted #Insect Survey: Protecting #Crops and #Ecosystems GloballyBBSRC Women in research and innovation montagePlants vs #Floods: How BBSRC-Funded #Scientists Are Tackling Water Run-Off | #Plant PowerNew genetic test to fight killer ash dieback diseaseHow animals adapt to their #environment | #Reindeer see a world of #UVLight

Animal virus research: an amazing new laboratory @bbsrcmedia

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER