Bird Flu Prompts Quick Quarantines as Chicken Farmers Fight Back
The merest mention of bird flu is
enough to send shivers down the spine of a chicken farmer. But as the U.S.
deals with its first case of highly pathogenic avian influenza on a farm in a
year, the poultry industry hasn’t started to panic.
Learning lessons after the
worst-ever U.S. outbreak two years ago, America’s chicken, turkey and egg
producers are gearing up with tighter biosecurity measures and quicker
quarantines to deter spread of the infection. One thing working in their favor:
early spring-like weather in the region that can stop the virus from thriving.
A U.S. outbreak of avian
influenza in 2015 wiped out more than 48 million birds through infection and
culling. The scourge that year sent egg prices soaring and prompted countries
around the globe to ban U.S. shipments of poultry products. Exports have only
started to recover, and another epidemic would threaten the livelihood of
farmers at time when agriculture incomes are slumping. South Korea and other
countries have already placed some restrictions on American shipments. The
latest U.S. case also comes at a time when the virus has spread in parts of
Asia and Europe.
After a fairly dormant cycle last
year, the highly contagious H7 strain of the virus was confirmed Sunday at a
southern Tennessee chicken-breeding operation that supplies Tyson Foods Inc.
Making matters worse, the state borders several of the nation’s largest
chicken-meat producing states, including Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas and North
Carolina. The virus is believed to spread partly by migratory wild birds,
posing the risk it may reach other farms. Still, the industry is confident in
its new security procedures.
“It’s hard right now to hit the
panic button because we know we’ve had these wild birds circulating all winter
-- it’s a hold-your-breath situation,” said Brett Stuart, founding partner at
Denver-based Global AgriTrends, a market researcher. “The fact we’ve made it
this long is very impressive. It speaks to the biosecurity efforts of U.S.
producers.”
The affected Tennessee operation
is now under quarantine and the 73,500 chickens at the farm have been
destroyed. The risk of human infection is very low, the state’s agriculture
department said in a statement March 5. Springdale, Arkansas-based Tyson said
all flocks within a six-mile radius of the farm will be tested and won’t be
transported unless they test negative for the virus.
That’s likely to be just the
beginning of the cautionary measures.
Since the 2015 outbreak, the
National Chicken Council has encouraged farmers and companies to take several
measures to prevent the spread of the virus, according to Ashley Peterson, the
group’s senior vice president for scientific and regulatory affairs. Along with
cleaning, disinfecting and limiting access, the council’s recommendations
include discouraging hunting of ducks and geese to avoid contact with infected
waterfowl, as well as not sharing equipment between farms, she said.
The discovery of infected birds
on the Tennessee farm underscores that producers are paying closer attention to
threats from the virus, and the case likely means the poultry industry is
“going to double down” on those efforts now, Peterson said.
U.S. poultry producers invested
millions of dollars to boost biosecurity in bird houses and increase their
ability to respond to incidents, said Will Sawyer, an Atlanta-based vice
president of animal protein at Rabobank International. Unlike two years ago,
companies can now depopulate birds and clean up themselves when the disease is
detected, as opposed to waiting for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, he
said. Producers have already been using heightened measures for a few months,
because of the seasonal risk. The virus survives better in colder weather.
“One thing that was a very important lesson
from 2015 -- the longer the active virus is exposed in the air and at a farm,
the more houses and production in that region become affected,” Sawyer said.
“There’s no waiting around anymore.”
This week’s case hasn’t affected
chicken prices yet, said Russ Whitman, vice president at commodity researcher
Urner Barry in Toms River, New Jersey. But that could change. South Korea’s
agriculture ministry already banned shipments of poultry and eggs from the U.S.
unless they’ve been heat treated. Canada and Japan have also placed
restrictions on shipments. Some countries may ban poultry on a regional basis,
while others may take broader strokes and ban products from the whole country,
Whitman said.
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In Tennessee, the next steps will
be continued testing and surveillance around the affected farm, the state’s
veterinarian Charles Hatcher said in a video posted online. If any further
positive cases are found, the infected flocks will be destroyed, he said.
About 30 nearby poultry farms are
under quarantine, according to the Tennessee Department of Agriculture. The
infected farm is located in Lincoln County, which borders Alabama. That puts
the neighboring state within the control zone and officials there have tested
about 15 farms, including another Tyson farm, according to Alabama’s
agriculture department. Samples from the company’s farm were negative for the
flu, the state agency said.
Other major producers are closely
monitoring the situation.
Sanderson Farms
While Sanderson Farms Inc.
doesn’t have operations in Tennessee, it is banning company vehicles from
traveling near the quarantined area, according to Chief Financial Officer Mike
Cockrell. If an outbreak occurs near one of their farms, there will be more drastic
measures, such as limiting travel of those coming into contact with live birds
and disinfecting all vehicles coming onto the farm, Cockrell said.
Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. has
activated response plans with “heightened on-farm biosecurity programs” at all
of its facilities, even though none of the company’s operations are located in
the area under quarantine, spokesman Cameron Bruett said Monday in an email.
Last year, there was just one
commercial instance of bird flu in the U.S., at an Indiana turkey farm. The
case was rapidly contained, giving the industry reasons to believe any
government response will be “aggressive and thorough,” Knox Jones, an analyst
at Advanced Economic Solutions in Omaha, Nebraska, said by phone. The unusual
warm weather this winter also decreases the chances of the disease spreading,
as the virus thrives in cold, wet environments, he said.
“The temperature really matters,”
Jones said.
Even with all the vigilance,
nothing is bulletproof, said Tom Elam, Carmel, Indiana-based president of
consulting firm FarmEcon LLC. After all, it’s March, and the wild birds are
migrating. Bird flu has been breaking out around the world, from Europe to
China.
Companies “are as ready as
they’re going to get, but all it takes is one mouse to get into that broiler
house and track in a virus, and the stuff is pretty virulent,” Elam said. “It’s
not a surprise it’s back.”
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