National Post (National Edition)

France could run out of foie gras for Christmas

- HENRY SAMUEL

PARIS • France is heading for a dearth of foie gras for the festive season, producers have warned, with prices expected to soar following a two-year battle against bird flu.

The warning came as the French head for Christmas with a chronic butter shortage and the lowest grape harvest for wine in the country since 1945.

Producers of foie gras, the famed and controvers­ial duck or goose liver pate eaten by millions of French around New Year, are still recovering from a string of cases of bird flu in southweste­rn France that forced them to slaughter thousands of birds.

Already last year there was a 25-per-cent drop in production of the delicacy. This year, Marie-Pierre Pé, head of the foie gras producers umbrella group, Cifog, said production was yet again down a further 22 per cent compared with 2016.

“Stocks of foie gras have dwindled after some producers in areas like western Nouvelle-Aquitaine and Occitanie had to stop activities for six to 10 months (as a precaution­ary measure after culling birds affected by the H5N1 virus),” she told Le Parisien.

This year, foie production has hit a ceiling of 11,000 tons, which represents “23 million ducks, compared to 29 million in 2016 — a year already hit by a first crisis of (bird flu),” she said.

On top of that, foreign buyers like Japan are back after recently lifting a ban on imports of the delicacy due to bird flu fears.

Prices are expected to rise by up to 20 per cent.

“Of course prices are rocketing; there isn’t enough to go round,” said Marie-Pierre Robert, head of a family farm of 6,000 ducks in Catus in the southweste­rn Lot.

Foie gras is made out of the fattened livers of geese and ducks that have been force-fed grain.

As for wine, there will be no shortage for Christmas, but the volumes from this year’s harvest were the smallest since 1945, meaning demand could outstrip supply next year. “All that was missing was a plague of frogs,” said Antoine Robert, son of Jean-Jacques and owner of organic winery Domaine Robert-Denogent in Burgundy.

There is one saving grace, however; after years of shortages, it has been a bumper year for truffles.

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