U.S. ends avian flu-related limits on Ont. poultry

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: August 25, 2015

, , ,

(Stephen Ausmus photo courtesy ARS/USDA)

Reuters — The U.S. Agriculture Department on Tuesday lifted restrictions on imports of poultry and poultry products from Ontario in the latest sign the farm sector is starting to recover from a severe outbreak of bird flu.

USDA limited imports from Ontario in April after a highly pathogenic (“high-path”) strain of H5N2 avian flu was detected on two turkey farms and a broiler operation in Oxford County.

Effective immediately, the restrictions will be removed on imports of products ranging from live poultry and research birds to hatching eggs, USDA said in a notice.

Read Also

While the bulk of Japan’s canola imports come from Canada, the supplier’s share has dropped from about 96 per cent of Japan’s imports to around 83 per cent. Australia has remained a major source of canola for Japan.
Photo: Canola Council of Canada

India, Japan canola crops to be steady in 2026/27 – USDA

Canola supplies for India and Japan are expected to remain relatively stable in the 2026/27 crop year, the United States Department of Agriculture said.

The virus, which infected farms in British Columbia before appearing in southwestern Ontario, has killed more than 48 million turkeys and chickens in 15 U.S. states since late December.

Those losses have pushed U.S. egg prices to record highs and squeezed turkey supplies ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.

No new infections of the virus have been found in the U.S. for more than two months, and some farmers whose flocks were affected have started the slow process of restocking barns.

For large egg producers, the rebuilding process could take up to two years.

The rebuilding process could last even longer if the virus re-emerges this fall when wild ducks, which carry the disease, begin their seasonal migrations.

Reporting for Reuters by Tom Polansek in Chicago.

About the author

Reuters

The news and media division of Thomson Reuters.

explore

Stories from our other publications