France hails bird flu vaccination as poultry let back outdoors

By 
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: March 27, 2025

,

Photo: deepblue4you/Getty Images Plus

Paris | Reuters — France said on Wednesday its poultry flocks will be allowed outdoors again after a lull in bird flu infections that the government attributed to a vaccination program.

France in 2023 became the world’s first large poultry exporter to launch a nationwide vaccine campaign against highly pathogenic avian influenza, or bird flu, as it sought to curb the virus that has ravaged poultry flocks worldwide and spread to other species including humans.

Why it matters: Canadian poultry flocks have faced bird flu outbreaks for years

Read Also

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago. (Vito Palmisano/iStock/Getty Images)

U.S. grains: Wheat futures rise on supply snags in top-exporter Russia

U.S. wheat futures closed higher on Thursday on concerns over the limited availability of supplies for export in Russia, analysts said.

The country requires vaccination of farm ducks, which are particularly vulnerable to bird flu.

“France’s vaccination policy has paid off,” Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard told lawmakers. “France has regained its status as a (bird flu) free country, the risk level is now moderate and ducks will be able to go outside again.”

The vaccination programme has been welcomed by the French poultry industry as it has helped production recover, despite trade restrictions imposed on France by some importing countries.

The United States is considering turning to vaccination as it grapples with a bird flu crisis that has sent egg prices soaring and seen transmission to dairy cows and farm workers.

Britain, meanwhile, this week announced that bird flu had been detected in a sheep, the first such reported case in the world.

— Reporting by Bertrand Boucey and Gus Trompiz

explore

Stories from our other publications