Millions of chickens reported dead in Hurricane Matthew floods

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: October 13, 2016

, , ,

NASA’s Terra satellite observes Post-Tropical Cyclone Matthew being absorbed by a cold front along the U.S. Eastern Seaboard on Oct. 9 at 11:45 a.m. ET. (NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Response Team)

Chicago | Reuters — Flooding from Hurricane Matthew has killed up to five million poultry birds in North Carolina, most of them chickens, the state’s top environmental official said Wednesday.

Donald van der Vaart, secretary of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, also told Reuters that some pits that hold hog waste on farms had been inundated with floodwaters. The waste, mixing with water, may eventually make its way into rivers, streams and the Atlantic Ocean.

Van der Vaart said he did not know how many pits had been inundated but that the environmental damage would be minimal because the hog waste will be “vastly diluted” by floodwaters.

Read Also

Photo: JHVEPhoto/Getty Images Plus

U.S. grains: Corn sets contract lows on expectations for big US crop

Chicago Board of Trade corn futures set contract lows and soybean futures sagged on Friday on expectations that beneficial weather for U.S. crops will lead to bumper harvests, analysts said.

North Carolina officials have been racing to help farmers swamped by Matthew and to assess damages since the storm dumped heavy rains on the state over the weekend. They have wanted to avoid a repeat of Hurricane Floyd, which overwhelmed hog farms and pits in 1999, contaminating waterways with animal carcasses and waste.

“Knock on wood, right now we don’t have the kind of catastrophic losses we had in 1999,” van der Vaart said. He added that there had been “a tremendous loss of life on the poultry side,” however, saying the number of birds killed could total about five million.

Floodwaters have covered areas across central and eastern North Carolina this week, killing 19 people and forcing more than 3,800 residents to flee to shelters.

Agriculture is the state’s top industry, contributing about US$84 billion to the economy, according to the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

The department has confirmed 1.8 million poultry have died, mostly chickens, spokesman Brian Long said. The total is expected to increase, he added.

Last year, North Carolina produced about 823 million chickens for meat, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Sanderson Farms, the third largest U.S. poultry producer, said it lost about 250,000 chickens being raised for meat in the state.

Tyson Foods said its losses were minimal because the company does did not have operations raising chickens for meat in flooded areas.

Privately held Perdue Farms said it was still assessing the number of chickens it lost.

Chicken carcasses will be disposed of primarily through composting inside the houses where the chickens were being raised, North Carolina officials said.

The state’s agriculture department said it had asked the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency for about US$5 million to help cover composting costs.

— Tom Polansek reports on agriculture and ag commodity markets for Reuters from Chicago.

explore

Stories from our other publications