Taiwan, Japan ban Ont. poultry over avian flu

By 
Rod Nickel
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: April 7, 2015

, , ,

(Scott Bauer photo courtesy ARS/USDA)

Winnipeg | Reuters — Japan and Taiwan have imposed trade restrictions on poultry and poultry products from Ontario, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said Tuesday, a day after avian flu was confirmed in the province.

The government agency said a turkey farm near Woodstock, Ont. was under quarantine after the presence of H5 avian influenza was confirmed there on Monday. It said seven other farms nearby were also under quarantine.

About 7,500 birds have died at the first farm, and the remaining 4,500 in the infected barn are scheduled to be killed Wednesday.

Read Also

In the latter half of 2025, 5.6 per cent more more chicks were placed for broiler production than in the same period in 2024. Photo: Getty Images Plus

Chicken, eggs benefit from demand for economical protein

Strong demand for protein and status as an economical alternative to beef bodes well for chicken and egg demand in 2026 according to recent analysis from Farm Credit Canada.

Ontario is Canada’s biggest turkey-producing province.

Avian flu was detected in December in British Columbia and has spread to numerous U.S. states, from Minnesota to California.

CFIA vice-president of policy and programs Paul Mayers said the agency was testing to confirm the subtype and pathogenicity of the Ontario virus, with results expected within days.

Taiwan and Japan are small markets for Canada, totalling about $9 million in sales last year. But trade restrictions also remain in place from 10 other countries over the B.C. outbreak, including Australia and Brazil.

Avian flu’s spread has not affected sales at Maple Leaf Foods, which processes poultry in Ontario mainly for domestic use, spokesman Dave Bauer said.

Rod Nickel is a Reuters correspondent covering the agriculture and mining sectors from Winnipeg.

explore

Stories from our other publications