Title: World Poultry Forum
1World Poultry Forum
- Guadalajara
- 18th September 2006
- David Nabarro
2Presentation
- Global Situation
- Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
- Threat of human influenza pandemic
- Egypt Situation
- Perspective of the Commercial Poultry Sector
- Options for joint working
- Acknowledgements Government of Egypt, FAO (Anni
McLeod and Jemi Domenech), WHO, UNICEF
3Three Kinds of Influenza
Seasonal Influenza The Flu
Avian Influenza Bird Flu
Pandemic Influenza A Pandemic
4and FAO
Map courtesy of FAO using data from OIE
5Map prepared By US Government
MYANMAR
6Global Avian Influenza Situation What is
happening now?
- New outbreaks in the last few months of H5N1 have
been confirmed in China, Thailand, Egypt and Laos
- Human cases reported from Thailand and suspected
in Vietnam - Continued outbreaks in birds and human cases in
Indonesia and Nigeria - Reports of HPAI from Russia, Eastern Europe and
Africa - Bird Migration Zones the cycle continues
- Unregulated Trade an important source of spread
- Efforts to encourage safe poultry rearing and
healthy human behaviour in commercial sector
and backyard - Pandemic preparedness work in Asia and the Pacific
7Sporadic Human Cases of Avian Influenza
- Human infection with H5N1 is rare, and usually
the result of virus transmission from birds to
humans. - Since 2003 H5N1 has infected 241 people
- 141 have died, mostly children and young adults.
- Human deaths have been confirmed from
Azerbaijan, Cambodia, China, Egypt, Indonesia,
Iraq, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam. - Vietnam (42) and Indonesia (46) account for more
than 80 of the total deaths. - No evidence of mutation to sustained human to
human transmissibility
8DETERMINANTS OF PANDEMIC INFLUENZA
A new influenza virus emerges to which the
general population has little/no immunity
The new virus must be able to replicate in humans
and cause disease
NOT TO DATE
The new virus must be efficiently transmitted
from one human to another
9What is the current threat level?
UN System Influenza Coordination
10Economic Impact of Next Pandemic
- The next influenza pandemic will start with local
outbreaks but will have global impact - Compare with SARS - lt1000 dead, 50 billion
economic loss. - It could lead to significant loss of life and
high absenteeism in all sectors - The IMF suggests a significant temporary impact
- markets closed, unreliable utilities and
telecoms, cash shortages - Reduced travel and leisure, impact on food
industry - There may be threats to Rule of Law, Security,
and Continuity of Governance
112 Avian Influenza Case Study Egypt
12Egypt 1 Current Situation
- Dramatic increase in chicken farming
- Increased availability of low cost chickens
- 40,000 farms and nearly a billion chickens
- Two million persons employed
- First farm with H5N1 Influenza 16 Feb 2006
- Information public 17 February 2006
- 3 governorates affected.
- H5N1 reported in 21 governorates, 107 districts.
- 859 farms and 167 backyards affected.
- 14 confirmed human infected cases, 6 fatalities
- Chicken production greatly reduced.
- Many chicken farmers destitute, seeking work
13Egypt 2 Location of AI infection
Established in 22 Governorates, 822
Villages,24 Positive site from 7581 Samples taken
allover these Governorates
14(No Transcript)
15Egypt 3 Reporting of Infected Foci Distributed
(Feb. June 2006)
16Egypt 4 Actions and Challenges
- Significant initiatives undertaken at Central
Government and Governorate level - Programme to improve bio-security and
surveillance in poultry farms has started,
systematic vaccination is being introduced,
restocking linked to bio-security - Improved bio-security is in the interests of the
producers - Need for veterinary specialists to exercise
strong supervision. - Effort to increase control over movements of live
poultry within and between governorates. - Effort to reduce live chicken markets, encourage
more hygienic handling of live poultry and
discourage the slaughtering of birds at home - Effort to Increase bio-security for backyard
chickens (education and legal provisions) - Mass communication campaigns being developed
(recognizing importance of poultry and AHI
control).
173 Avian Influenza overall market impacts
18Markets, disease, human behaviour tightly
interlinked...
19Demand for poultry has driven a rising market
share....
Poultry
40 of Share
22 of Share
203.1 Market Factors
21Poultry prices in 2003 were low....
Asia/ Russian Crisis
Avian flu
22Recent AI outbreaks have led to fall in global
poultry consumption....
US export prices rose to record levels in Oct
2005, but dropped 13 by the end of the year.
23AI has shifted export patterns...
24Some National markets have experienced severe
shocks..
- IRAQ, only 50 out of 500 semi-commercial farms
continued operating - EGYPT, the poultry industry is reported to have
lost 30 of its numbers and 35 of its value - INDIA reported consumption drops of 25, causing
a 12-13 fall in domestic prices - BRAZIL, the price of day old chicks fell by 50
although there has been no outbreak
253.2 The effect of human behaviour
26Market shocks are caused by consumer perceptions
of risk.......
- ITALY one outbreak, consumption fell by 70
- NEPAL no outbreaks, but falling demand in local
poultry markets - MAURITANIA after an outbreak in Nigeria ,
poultry prices dropped to 52 of their former
level - MIDDLE EAST
- SHOCKS ARE OUT OF PROPORTION TO RISK
27Continued risky behaviour from producers,
traders....
- Wild birds are still being illegally traded
- Poultry sales continued from affected areas while
outbreaks were in progress, in spite of movement
bans
- Some live-bird markets have upgraded their
biosecurity, using a mixture of stick and
carrot.
283.3 The effect on human wellbeing
29Loss of assets and income....
- Total losses are greatest for industrial and
large commercial producers, but...
- Small commercial producers lose a major asset and
are unable to repay debts.
- Owners of scavenging flocks are least likely to
be compensated for loss.
30Market barriers raised....
- Biosecurity measures taken in Vietnam have caused
market chains to change shape, excluding
smallholder producers of chickens and ducks.
Contract farmers were protected during the 2003-4
outbreaks, but now find it harder to comply with
requirements.
- If small farmers can no longer meet biosecurity
demands, small traders and input suppliers will
be affected - The challenges is for the small farmers and large
producers to work as one on the threat
313.4 What might the future hold?
32POSSIBLE FUTURES
Consumer confidence is restored, but disease
continues to spread, trade bans continue. Demand
rises but sources of supply are limited. Prices
rise short term, market balance restored longer
term?
HPAI continues to spread, consumer confidence in
poultry remains low. Demand and supply fall. Long
term projections change, shift in favour of other
protein?
Consumer confidence is restored, disease freedom
restored in compartments or zones. Trade is
restored while disease is gradually brought under
control. Long term total market projections
affected very little?
33Can we lessen the negative impacts?
Restore trade more quickly
- Effective rapid response mechanisms to deal with
outbreaks
- Creative approaches to disease freedom e.g.
compartmentalisation
- Compartments will only work if there is
transparency timely dissemination of all
relevant information about AI outbreaks
344 Take Home Messages
35Public Health fact
- Around 70 percent of new human infections will
come from animal diseases. The line of defense
against these threats should be built in the
animal and human health sectors together, with
the animal health sector increasing its focus on
animal health along the standards adopted members
of the OiE and strategies developed by both the
OIE and FAO.
36Nutrition fact
- Urbanization, income rise and dietary changes
create an increase in the demand for animal
production. Poultry production is an economic
activity, a key contributor to human nutrition
and a critical provider of raw material for the
food industry. A chicken egg has all the 8
essential amino acids required for the human diet.
37Consumer issue
- The demand for poultry will be sustained if
consumers are confident that animal health
standards are applied. This means veterinary
services that work, health regulations (like OiE)
that are universally applied especially in trade.
Safe on-farm production contributes directly to a
better human health and well being and advice
about good cooking practice.
38The current problem
- The current epizootic of Highly Pathogenic Avian
Influenza has exploded dramatically across the
world in a very visible manner. The risk of an
influenza pandemic is real. This affects public
confidence and minimize the likelihood of poultry
flocks being affected by influenza viruses.
Keep the demand dip as short as possible.
39The reality for Producers
- Poultry industries are expected to continue to
expand rapidly in most countries for the next two
decades. Will this expansion be affected by lack
of public confidence in the safety of the
product? Or can consumers, producers and
retailers learn to live with H5N1.
40The potential reward
- The epizootic of H5N1 can be brought under
control if poultry production and marketing is
made safer. This means introducing sound
hygiene, biosecurity, testing, certification and
consumer education measures throughout the
production and marketing chain.
41A Common Priority Get the message out, where it
is needed
42Promote 4 actions now!
Street-wise hygiene campaign
43Conclusion
- No simple answers to any of the continuing
challenges we all face - The eyes of many are on us
- It is imperative that we work together to address
these challenges, engaging communities, private
entities, different levels of government,
political leaders, international community as we
do it - We depend on Alliances in which we can discuss
these issues and review how we are getting on
without fear of attack and recrimination - We need to sustain alliances at local national
and global levels. They will enable us to move
together as one