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Avian influenza: the Council of State rejects appeals against the confinement of poultry

2021-12-24T17:55:59.100Z


The highest administrative court based its decision on the highly pathogenic nature of the disease, potentially transmissible to humans.


The Council of State on Friday rejected the appeals of the Confédération paysanne and associations against the confinement imposed on ducks, geese and free-range hens in the face of "

a serious and urgent health risk

", while the epidemic is spreading bird flu.

"

Despite the seriousness of the attacks invoked by the applicants (...), it results from the investigation that the contested measures were decided to face a particularly serious and urgent health risk

", explains the highest administrative court in its order.

Read also Foie gras, turkeys and capons at the Christmas meeting despite the avian flu

Since November 5, French breeders have been required to “

shelter

” their outdoor poultry to avoid any contact with migratory birds that can transmit the avian influenza virus. The government hopes to avoid a repeat of last winter's episode. Bird flu had spread like wildfire in farms in the South West and was only stopped at the cost of slaughtering more than 3.5 million poultry, mostly ducks.

The confinement of poultry used to moving outside, experienced as heartbreak by breeders, has been denounced by the Confédération paysanne and Modef unions and several breeders associations as a "

declaration of war

" against the most common breeding models. virtuous: self-sufficient (animals raised in total autonomy on the farm), farmer (less than 250 animals), organic, operating in a short circuit.

"High risk"

During the hearing on December 17, the applicants' lawyer had described "

confinement measures that go against the free-range farming model

", and requested the suspension of the confinement or biosecurity provisions imposed by arrested.

"

20% of farmers (out of 14,000 concerned) are not able to carry out this sheltering

", which requires significant work and a sometimes unbearable cost, said François Gilbert.

Read also Avian influenza in the Gers: preventive slaughter of ducks from seven other farms

He denounced decisions "

taken into account of industrial agriculture, for which the measures have a limited impact

" while "

the consequences are disastrous for farm agriculture

". The representative of the Ministry of Agriculture had put forward "

the general interest

": "

the stake is the future of the sector: if we do not want to have every year 500 million euros of losses because we had an epizootic, we must take these measures

”.

The applicants criticized the very interest of these measures: thus, the reduced outdoor range authorized was reduced from 4 m2 to 0.5 m2 for organic hens. "

Reducing the route to this point is to multiply the health risks, parasitism and abuse

", explained Sylvie Colas, breeder of organic hens and guinea fowl from the Gers. The applicants also stressed that one of the greatest risks of introducing the virus into a farm is linked to transport and visits, which does not or hardly concern their self-sufficient farms.

The Council of State justified its decision by the highly pathogenic nature of the disease, potentially transmissible to humans, and relied on opinions from the National Health Security Agency (ANSES) which underline the "

high risk

»Contamination of poultry on outdoor runs.

Read also Avian influenza: 16 poultry farms affected in France

He also noted the rapid increase in the number of affected households.

On the day of the hearing, France had eight outbreaks of bird flu, all in the North.

This Friday, 17 farms are affected, more than half of them in the South-West.

The latest, a breeding of more than 15,000 ducks, under shelter, which went to fattening in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques.

Source: lefigaro

All business articles on 2021-12-24

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