Egg shortage due to bird flu outbreak? A million eggs per day have disappeared from the market of Poland

Published 2024년 10월 25일

Tridge summary

A bird flu outbreak at a laying hen farm in Wielkopolska has led to the decision to cull nearly 1.4 million hens, resulting in a loss of one million eggs per day to the market. The National Federation of Poultry Breeders and Egg Producers expects it will take at least 20 weeks to restore the lost production. The incident is causing disruptions in the egg supply chain, with large retail chains setting purchase prices. The federation is calling for a reasonable approach to egg pricing from these retail chains to stabilize the market.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

After a bird flu outbreak was confirmed at a laying hen farm in Wielkopolska, nearly 1.4 million hens were designated for culling, which means that one million fewer eggs will be delivered to the market per day - informed Paweł Podstawka, chairman of the National Federation of Poultry Breeders and Egg Producers (KFHDiPJ) on Friday. After a bird flu outbreak was confirmed at a laying hen farm in Wielkopolska, nearly 1.4 million hens were designated for culling. It will take at least 20 weeks to restore the lost potential - informed the federation. "Over a million eggs per day have suddenly disappeared from the market. This is a huge number that was supposed to reach bakeries, shops and food production plants every day. Of course, there will be voices saying that in a country where around 50 million eggs were produced per day not long ago, this is a small loss, but in the current egg trading system, in which the pricing policy of large retail chains plays a significant role, and for ...
Source: AgroPolska

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