China reports first
African swine fever outbreak, culls 1,000 hogs
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[August 03, 2018]
By Hallie Gu and Josephine Mason
BEIJING (Reuters) - China reported its
first outbreak of the deadly African swine fever (ASF) on Friday, as
authorities in Liaoning province in the country's northeast culled
almost 1,000 hogs and rushed to control the highly contagious disease.
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News of the infection will stoke concern about its spread in the
world's largest pig herd, and possibly to Japan, the Korean
Peninsula and other parts of Asia. Cases have been recorded across
Europe, Russia and sub-Saharan Africa, but it has never occurred in
East Asia until now, according to the United Nations' Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
Some 913 hogs were slaughtered near Shenyang, capital of Liaoning,
and the outbreak had been effectively contained, the provincial
animal health bureau said.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs issued an alert
following the outbreak, banning farmers from transporting hogs from
the affected areas and from feeding the animals with untreated food
waste.
The ministry said the infection was discovered on Wednesday on a
small farm with a herd of 383 pigs in Shenbei New district in
Shenyang and was confirmed on Friday. Some 47 pigs died from the
disease.
"If it can be put under control, it should not be a problem ... but
we have to watch the developments very carefully," said Yao Guiling,
an analyst with consultancy China-America Commodity Data Analytics.
"If the disease gets out of control, the losses will be
immeasurable."
The appearance of the disease is the latest blow to Chinese hog
farmers, who have been struggling with a prolonged rout as years of
frenzied investment to boost production have created oversupply,
with output well beyond stagnating domestic demand.
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A widespread outbreak and major culling would help remove some of
the excess but it may also damage demand just as China prepares for
a pick up in consumption during the week-long Midautumn holiday in
October.
ASF is one of the most devastating diseases to affect swine herds.
It occurs among pigs and wild boars, transmitted by ticks and direct
contact between animals. Its effects are often deadly, and there is
no vaccine.
It does not affect humans.
China is home to about half of the global pig population, with
thousands of backyard and large-scale farms operating in the
northern, central and southern regions. It produces about half of
the world's pork and is the top consumer of the meat.
Smallhold farmers are less likely to have safety standards or
biosecurity in place to protect against the disease. A big wild boar
population can also make an area more vulnerable to infection,
experts say.
An official at South Korea's agriculture ministry said the country
has not introduced any steps to increase quarantine checks or curb
imports from China, but the country does not import from ASF-infected
countries.
(Reporting by Hallie Gu and Josephine Mason; Additional reporting by
Jane Chung in SEOUL; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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