Bird flu puts organic chickens into lockdown from Pennsylvania to France
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[May 02, 2022]
By Tom Polansek and Sybille de La Hamaide
CHICAGO/PARIS (Reuters) - Organic and
free-range chickens have been thrown into lockdown. Egg-laying hens that
normally have access to the outdoors can no longer roam as freely or
feel the sun on their beaks as some U.S. and European farmers
temporarily keep flocks inside during lethal outbreaks of bird flu,
according to egg producers and industry representatives.
The switch comes as a surprise to shoppers already shelling out more
money for eggs due to cullings of infected flocks. Consumers pay extra
for specialty eggs, thinking they come from hens that can venture out of
barns.
U.S. watchdogs say retailers and egg companies must do a better job
informing customers that hens are kept inside, as shoppers track their
spending amid record global food inflation. Keeping birds inside is
safest for now, according to government officials, because a single case
of bird flu results in entire flocks being culled. The virus can also
infect humans, though experts say the risk is low. In France, where the
government has temporarily required farmers to keep chickens indoors
since November, some retailers are defying obligations to post clear
information for consumers about the mandate, according to checks of
grocery stores by Reuters. "I didn't know that they had to stay inside,"
said Josephine Barit, 34, a shopper at a small Paris store that had no
indications hens may have been confined.
"So it's not really 'free range' anymore?" she said. "I suppose there is
no other choice because of bird flu, but they could say so."
Allowing chickens time outside is thought to be more humane, giving
consumers some peace of mind about buying animal farm products.
Veterinarians say poultry with outdoor access are particularly
vulnerable to becoming infected with bird flu, officially known as
highly pathogenic avian influenza or HPAI, because migratory birds
spread the disease. Poultry can fall ill from contact with infected wild
birds, their feathers or feces.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture recommends farmers keep poultry
indoors "as long as the HPAI outbreak is ongoing," but has not required
confinement.
DISSATISFIED CUSTOMERS
The U.S. outbreak is the second-worst in history, with more than 35
million birds wiped out this year. France has culled nearly 16 million
birds in its worst outbreak ever, while infections have also hit nations
including Britain, Italy and Spain.
European requirements to confine chickens have left some consumers
dissatisfied even when retailers post signs notifying customers of the
change.
"At the end of the day you still pay the price of 'free range' or
organic eggs when the fowls have actually never seen the sky," said Marc
Dossem, 52, a shopper who spoke in a large supermarket in Paris.
EU and British marketing standards allow for free-range laying hens to
be kept inside for up to 16 weeks before companies must issue advisories
to customers.
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An employee of a poultry farm examines eggs in Volnay, western
France February 23, 2006./File Photo
Britain temporarily required eggs
from "free-range" hens kept indoors to be labeled "barn eggs," but
has allowed farmers to let hens outside again starting in May.
In Spain, hens must be kept indoors in special risk and surveillance
areas of the country, said Mar Fernández, Spanish head of the
Interprofessional Organisation of Eggs and Egg Products. They have
not yet been indoors for more than 16 weeks, she said.
"There are countries that no longer have eggs from free-range hens
available for months," Fernández said.U.S. authorities do not
require organic egg producers to update labels when unexpected
events like bird flu change production practices, the agriculture
department said. Eggs labeled "organic" as well as "free range" must
come from hens with access to the outdoors in the United States.
MISSING THE SUNSHINE
Among the suppliers now prohibiting outdoor access is Pete and
Gerry's, which says it is the leading U.S. producer of organic,
free-range and pasture-raised eggs. The business sells eggs in
stores owned by Kroger Co and Amazon.com Inc's Whole Foods Market.
"We will be constantly evaluating the exposure risk and will have
them back outside in the sunshine as soon as possible," Pete and
Gerry's said.
Vital Farms Inc, another U.S. producer of pasture-raised eggs, said
it confined hens after outbreaks in Europe. Both producers have
information online about the switch, but their "free-range" and
"pasture raised" labels remain the same.
Whole Foods, Kroger and Target Corp did not respond to questions
about whether they would post notices for shoppers. "Consumers
should get what they pay for and they're not getting the product as
advertised," said Danielle Melgar, a food advocate for the U.S.
Public Interest Research Group.
Some European producers are resisting orders to confine poultry,
despite the risks.
"Laying hens can be quite aggressive so we let them out a little bit
every day or they will kill each other," said Emilie Ravalli, who
runs an organic farm in Corcoue-sur-Logne in western France.
But barns can be comfortable, and chickens do not always go outside
each day even when they are able to, said Gregory Martin, a poultry
scientist at Pennsylvania State University.
"Confinement gives us safety," Martin said. "Only live birds produce
eggs, so it's to our advantage to keep our birds safe."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago and Sybille de La Hamaide in
Paris; Additional reporting by Nigel Hunt in London and Emma Pinedo
Gonzalez in Madrid; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Matthew Lewis)
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