Two cases were detected in wild birds and should not trigger a ban on imports of Brazilian poultry products as per guidelines from the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), according to the Brazilian government.
The avian influenza virus can kill entire flocks of birds and cause losses for the farming sector. Brazil’s chicken exports rose by 27% last year to $9.76 billion as other countries reeled from a global outbreak of the virus, yet the South American country had never registered a case until now.
The Brazilian government confirmed the detection of H5N1 subtype of the influenza virus on two birds migrating off the coast of Brazil’s southeastern state of Espirito Santo. Brazil’s main poultry producing states are in the far south and center-west.
The agriculture ministry said that because the cases were detected in wild animals, Brazil’s status “as a country free of HPAI” was not affected.
Miguel Gularte, CEO of Brazil-based BRF, the world’s largest chicken exporting company, told a press conference he was not surprised by the case of highly pathogenic avian influenza, adding the company is prepared for any scenario. The executive reiterated WOAH’s recommendations that no members of that organisation impose import bans because of cases detected in wild animals.
BRF’s Gularte also noted the company relies on Brazil’s “robust” animal health services to prevent and contain any potential threats to industrial poultry farms.Brazil’s main importers of chicken products in April included China, Japan, South Africa and Saudi Arabia.
China has banned imports of poultry from nearly 40 U.S. states due to outbreaks of bird flu on commercial poultry farms.
Brazil’s neighbor Argentina suspended its poultry exports in late February after recording the first case of bird flu in its poultry industry in southern Rio Negro province but resumed exports from bird flu free areas in late March.
A record number of chicken, turkeys and other birds have died in outbreaks in the United States, Europe and Britain, and the virus is spreading in South America, Africa, and Asia. Losses of poultry flocks have contributed to record high prices for eggs and turkey meat in some places.
While humans can contract H5N1, cases remain very rare, and global health officials have said the risk of transmission between humans is low.