The pork market in Germany after a year of ASF infections

Published Sep 11, 2021

Tridge summary

Germany has reported 2,073 cases of African Swine Fever (ASF) in wild boars, predominantly in Brandenburg and Saxony, marking the first anniversary of the outbreak. The disease has also reached domestic pig stocks, leading to the installation of 1,000 km of permanent fences along the Polish border to prevent further spread. The government is considering requests from state governments for more financial and professional support, and is in discussions with China to recognize the regionalization concept. Aid for pig farmers and efforts to find additional slaughterhouses for healthy pigs from ASF restriction areas are among the ongoing initiatives.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Exactly a year ago today, the first ASF case in Germany was officially established in a wild boar in the Spree-Neisse district. There are now 2,073 ASF cases confirmed by the Friederich Loeffler Institute in wild boars, 1,622 of them in Brandenburg and 448 in Saxony. In addition, there are three ASF finds in domestic pig stocks in Brandenburg, two in small holdings and one in an organic farm with 200 pigs. 1,000 km of permanent fences installed in Brandenburg to date In Brandenburg alone, seven core areas have since been identified and fenced in in the districts near the border with Poland. Four double-fenced white zones with a width of up to 5 km were created, in which all wild boars are to be removed with live traps and through hunting measures. And a permanent fence has been installed along the entire border with Poland and a second permanent fence is under construction. The aim is to set up a white zone along the entire border to prevent further ASF-infected wild boars from ...

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