Gulf Times

Fast spreading avian influenza puts EU poultry industry on the edge

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Ahighly contagious and deadly form of avian influenza is spreading rapidly in Europe, putting the poultry industry on alert with previous outbreaks in mind that saw tens of millions of birds culled and significan­t economic losses.

The disease, commonly called bird flu, has been found in France, the Netherland­s, Germany, Britain,

Belgium, Denmark, Ireland, Sweden and, for the first time this week in Croatia, Slovenia and Poland, after severely hitting Russia, Kazakhstan and Israel.

The vast majority of cases are in migrating wild birds but outbreaks have been reported on farms, leading to the death or culling of at least 1.6mn chickens and ducks so far around the region.

In the Netherland­s, Europe’s largest exporter of chicken meat and eggs, nearly 500,000 chickens died or were culled due to the virus this autumn, and over 900,000 hens died on one single farm in Poland this week, the countries’ ministries said.

“The risk of a transfer in poultry farms and more cases among wild birds is higher than in the past two years because of the massive appearance of various bird flu viruses in Europe,” said a spokeswoma­n for the Friedrich Loeffler Institute, Germany’s federal animal disease research agency.

Russia’s poultry death toll reached 1.8mn by the end of October, with nearly 1.6mn of that on one farm near Kazakhstan, data by the World Organisati­on for Animal Health (OIE) showed.

The main strain found this year in Europe is H5N8, which decimated flocks in 2016/17 when the region recorded its largest outbreak in poultry and wild birds, but there were also reports of H5N5 and H5N1.

Although the risk to humans is low, the European Food Safety

Agency (EFSA) said this week that the virus’ evolution needed to be closely monitored.

A strain of H5N1 has been known to spread to humans.

EU poultry industry players said they are very concerned about the latest outbreak but were now experience­d in dealing with them.

“We have worked so hard to improve safety, to train breeders and improve traceabili­ty that we hope that if there are cases we will manage to contain them,” said Anne Richard, head of France’s poultry industry lobby ANVOL.

Most counties have raised their alert status to “high”, implying that poultry and birds be kept indoors or protected in order to avoid contact with wild birds.

Bird flu outbreaks like other animal diseases often prompt importing countries to impose trade restrictio­ns.

That will add to coronaviru­s related lockdowns threatenin­g to curb year-end holiday sales.

“It’s already difficult to export with the Covid-19 pandemic … this would make it even worse,” Denis Lambert, chief executive of France’s largest poultry group LDC said on Wednesday.

However, importing countries’ approach to limit restrictio­ns to regions affected by the virus should help soften the impact.

China, for example, has suspended imports of poultry products from four regions in Russia due to bird flu, Tass news agency reported on Wednesday.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Frederikse­n is seen after visiting a closed and empty mink farm near Kolding, Denmark.
Prime Minister Frederikse­n is seen after visiting a closed and empty mink farm near Kolding, Denmark.

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