Bird flu alarm drives world towards once-shunned vaccines
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[February 17, 2023]
By Sybille de La Hamaide
CASTELNAU-TURSAN, France (Reuters) - French duck farmer Herve Dupouy has
culled his flock four times since 2015 to stop the spread of bird flu
but as a wave of deadly outbreaks nears his farm once again, he says
it's time to accept a solution once considered taboo: vaccination.
"The goal is that our animals don't fall ill and that they don't spread
the virus," Dupouy said on his farm in Castelneu-Tursan in southwestern
France. "Our job as farmers is not to gather dead animals."
Like Dupouy, more and more governments around the world are
reconsidering their opposition to vaccines as culling birds or locking
them inside has failed to prevent bird flu returning to decimate
commercial flocks year after year.
Reuters spoke to senior officials in the world's largest poultry and egg
producers, along with vaccine makers and poultry companies. They all
said there had been a marked shift in the approach to vaccines globally
due to the severity of this year's bird flu outbreak, though the biggest
exporter of poultry meat, the United States, told Reuters it remains
reluctant.
Besides the cost of culling millions of chickens, ducks, turkeys and
geese there is also a growing fear among scientists and governments that
if the virus becomes endemic, the chances of it mutating and spreading
to humans will only increase.
"That's why every country in the world is worried about bird flu,"
French agriculture minister Marc Fesneau said.
"There's no reason to panic but we must learn from history on these
subjects. This is why we are looking into vaccinations at the global
level," he told Reuters.
Most of the world's biggest poultry producers have resisted vaccinations
due to concerns they could mask the spread of bird flu and hit exports
to countries that have banned vaccinated poultry on fears infected birds
could slip through the net.
But since early last year, bird flu, or avian influenza, has ravaged
farms around the world, leading to the deaths of more than 200 million
birds because of the disease or mass culls, the World Organisation for
Animal Health (WOAH) told Reuters.
The mass culls last year also sent the price of eggs sky-rocketing,
contributing to the global food crisis.
U.S. HOLDS OUT
Mexico started emergency vaccinations last year while Ecuador said this
month it planned to inoculate more than two million birds after the
virus infected a 9-year-old girl.
France is on track to start vaccinating poultry in September,
agriculture minister Fesneau told Reuters, before the return of
migrating wild birds that can infect farms.
The EU, meanwhile, agreed last year to implement a vaccine strategy
across its 27 member states.
Brussels has also normalised its poultry vaccination rules, which are
due to come into force next month. They will ensure poultry products and
day-old chicks can be traded freely within the bloc, a European
Commission spokesperson told Reuters.
China, which consumes most of its poultry production domestically, has
been vaccinating against avian influenza for nearly 20 years and has
managed to sharply reduce outbreaks.
But the biggest producer of poultry meat in the world, the United
States, is holding out for now.
The United States has been hit hardest worldwide in the latest outbreak
with a toll of more than 58 million birds in the past year, followed by
Canada, while France has suffered the most within the EU, WOAH data
showed.
But the fear of trade restrictions remains centre stage for countries
reluctant to vaccinate poultry against bird flu.
While vaccines can reduce death rates, some vaccinated birds could still
contract the disease and transmit it, effectively masking the spread of
the virus.
That's why some big buyers of poultry meat and live birds have banned
imports from countries where vaccines are permitted, for fear of
bringing in the virus as well.
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Ducks are seen inside a poultry farm in
Castelnau-Tursan, France, January 24, 2023. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
Bird flu can also mutate rapidly and
reduce the efficacy of vaccines while programmes are costly and time
consuming, as shots often need to be administered individually. And
even once birds have been vaccinated, flocks need to be monitored.
"The use of a vaccine at this time would have detrimental impacts on
poultry trade while still necessitating response activities such as
quarantine, depopulation, and surveillancetesting," the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) told Reuters.
Given trade restrictions on vaccinated poultry, bilateral
negotiations would be needed to clear exports to those markets and
avoid unfair competition, Philippe Gelin, chief executive of
France's LDC, one of Europe's largest poultry firms.
French minister Fesneau told Reuters that Paris was negotiating with
its non-EU trade partners to allow exports of vaccinated poultry
while there were also bilateral talks at the EU level with countries
outside the bloc.
MRNA POULTRY VACCINES
Brazil, the world's largest poultry exporter, has so far avoided an
outbreak - and the need for vaccines - though the virus is getting
closer with several of its neighbours including Bolivia reporting
outbreaks.
But countries such as France, which spent 1.1 billion euros ($1.2
billion) last year compensating poultry farmers for their losses,
believe it's time to bite the vaccination bullet.
"This is a huge economic loss," said Gilles Salvat, deputy director
of the research division at French health security agency ANSES. "We
won't avoid occasional introductions (of the virus) via wildlife or
via a contaminated environment, but what we want to avoid is these
occasional introductions spreading throughout the country."
As part of the EU-wide strategy, France is carrying out tests on
vaccines for ducks, which are very receptive to the virus and remain
asymptomatic for many days, increasing the risk of transmission to
other farms.
The Netherlands is testing vaccines on egg-laying hens, Italy is
doing the same on turkeys and Hungary on Pekin ducks, with the
results from the EU trials expected in the coming months.
France's Ceva Animal Health, one of the main companies developing
bird flu vaccines along with Germany's Boehringher Ingelheim, said
initial results were "very promising", notably by sharply reducing
the excretion of the virus by infected birds.
Ceva said it was using the mRNA technology used in some COVID shots
for the first time in poultry vaccines.
The global market for bird flu vaccines would be about 800 million
to 1 billion doses per year, excluding China, said Sylvain Comte,
corporate marketing director for poultry at Ceva.
Although the risk to humans from bird flu remains low, and there
have never been cases of human-to-human transmission, countries must
prepare for any change in the status quo, the World Health
Organization said last week.
The recent COVID crisis has shown the risk of a virus found in
animals mutating or combining with another influenza virus to make
the jump to humans - and lead to a global pandemic.
The H5N1 strain prevalent in the latest bird flu outbreak has killed
several mammals, including minks in Spain, foxes and otters in
Britain, a cat in France and grizzly bears in the United States.
"Without being alarmist, we should be careful and not let this virus
circulate too intensively and for too long," said Salvat at French
agency ANSES.
($1 = 0.9351 euros)
(Reporting by Sybille de La Hamaide and Stephane Mahe in France,
Cassandra Garrison in Mexico, Tom Polansek in Chicago, Ana Mano in
Sao Paulo, Phil Blenkisop in Brussels, Michael Hogan in Hamburg,
Nigel Hunt in London, Sarah El Safty in Cairo and Dominique Patton
in Beijing; Editing by David Clarke)
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