French foie gras makers worry as bird flu spreads in Europe

French foie gras makers worry as bird flu spreads in Europe

by Joseph Anthony
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The 25 per cent drop in output and higher costs will lead to the rise in prices of foie gras products this year

New outbreaks in Europe of a severe strain of bird flu pose a fresh worry for French foie gras producers, already reeling from lost sales last year when the virus emerged in southwestern France.

The run-up to Christmas coincides with peak demand for the delicacy, Franceโ€™s favourite festive treat, made from duck or goose liver.

Marie-Pierre Pe from foie gras makers group CIFOG, said on Monday that prices could be 10 per cent higher this Christmas after the French governmentโ€™s decision last year to cull all ducks and geese, and halt output for four months, in a bid to contain the virus.

Farmers hope that stricter measures in place at French farms to spare birds from contamination after last yearโ€™s crisis will better protect their industry should the current outbreak of the H5N8 strain, already seen in neighbouring Germany and Switzerland and other European countries, hit France.

โ€œWhen I heard about new bird flu cases in Europe, I thought: It canโ€™t be true, the nightmare is not going to start all over again,โ€ Pe told Reuters.

โ€œWe did all that is needed to prepare farmers since the start of the year but we are never immune from birds contaminating a farm,โ€ she said.

Producers estimate the freezing of output had cost the industry around 500 million euros, including a 270 million euros loss in sales and additional costs for new biosecurity material.

The 25 per cent drop in output and higher costs will lead to the rise in prices of foie gras products this year, Pe said.

Sold whole or as a pate, foie gras is considered a gourmet food in Western and Asian cuisine, but the practice of force-feeding has often been criticised as cruel by animal activists.

CIFOG held regular meetings with farmers this year to explain biosecurity measures put in place after the crisis, such as better protecting food and water from wild birds, Pe said. Farmers in southwestern France, the top foie gras producing region, also face stricter rules to avoid contamination between farms, notably through equipment disinfection.

As well as Germany and Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Poland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Croatia, have also reported outbreaks of the highly contagious H5N8 bird flu in recent weeks.

No case of bird flu has been found in France so far this time but the country raised surveillance measures on Thursday to keep wild migrating birds from transmitting the virus to farm poultry.

Denmark ordered farmers to keep their poultry indoors on Monday due to the bird flu threat and Germany said it was considering ordering farmers to keep their flocks inside.

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