Tuesday, February 25, 2025

The battle over a chicken vaccination puts egg and poultry industries at odds

Chicken vaxing could help egg producers but harm
poultry industries. (Adobe Stock photo)
American poultry and egg businesses can't agree on a strategy to contain bird flu while protecting incomes. "The chicken and egg industries are at odds. The argument isn’t over which came first but about bird flu vaccinations," reports Patrick Thomas of The Wall Street Journal. "Egg companies are calling for a stronger government response to the bird flu outbreak. . . . They are also petitioning regulators to greenlight a vaccine that could be administered on farms, a sharp reversal from their position a few years ago."

Chicken companies, such as Purdue and Tyson, are not on board with a large-scale flock vaccination because it would put their $5 billion chicken export revenue at risk. Thomas explains, "Countries that import chicken products would cut off purchases of American poultry. Each country would need to sign off on the U.S.’s vaccination strategy before accepting imports again."

Despite the debate, the Department of Agriculture issued a "conditional approval to animal-health company Zoetis for its bird flu vaccine for poultry," Thomas reports. "The next step in the process would be getting commercial approval. Even if that happens, it will still take time to sort out trade ramifications, ramp up production and develop a distribution. For now, the vaccine "is not authorized for use on farms, and poultry producers can’t buy it."

In the coming week, the USDA is expected to "roll out a comprehensive strategy to combat bird flu, the agency representative said, adding that the administration is committed to safeguarding poultry farms and keeping egg prices affordable for families," Thomas adds. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told Fox News, "This is going to take a little while to bring these prices back down."

Although a chicken vaccine would help the egg industry, delayed chicken exports would produce a chain of costly international and domestic trade problems. Thomas explains, "A backup in exports could lead to production cuts from major chicken companies, resulting in fewer grain and soybean purchases for livestock feed from farmers."

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