Argentina: Chicken can be much more expensive or much cheaper, depending on where you live

Published Mar 12, 2023

Tridge summary

Argentina has been temporarily removed from international poultry markets due to the detection of highly pathogenic avian influenza in commercial poultry flocks. The country, which exports 185,000 tons of poultry meat annually worth about $350 million, is the eighth largest poultry exporter in the world. The virus was first detected in mid-February and has since spread from wild birds to commercial chicken farms in Buenos Aires and Cordoba provinces. Argentina's poultry industry is currently dealing with the effects of the virus and supply shortages from the Ukraine war, but has recently started shipping to Saudi Arabia and expects a 4% growth in overseas sales this year. The article also discusses concerns about the potential impact of avian flu on Brazilian poultry farms and the broader implications for global poultry markets.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Argentina has now been removed from international poultry markets after highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) was detected in commercial poultry flocks. The country exports 185,000 tons of poultry meat annually, worth about $350 million, and while this may seem small compared to neighboring Brazil's exports (4.85 million tons), Argentina is ranked as the eighth largest poultry exporter in the world. Stopped exports therefore not only have local effects. The appearance of the virus was first reported in mid-February in the South American country, and since then 25 cases have been reported. At that time, as in neighboring countries, highly pathogenic avian influenza infection was detected only in wild birds, but now the virus has also appeared on commercial chicken farms. The first case was in the Rio Negro province of northern Patagonia, an area without significant poultry production. Since then, however, the virus has spread north, appearing in a commercial farm and a backyard ...

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