Outlook for global poultry markets remains strong feednavigator.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from feednavigator.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Outlook for the global poultry industry is improving feednavigator.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from feednavigator.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PoultryWorld
Poultry market outlook recovers, national differences remain
After a very challenging quarter, the outlook for the global poultry industry is gradually improving, although poultry trade remains very competitive.
Rabobank’s latest poultry report notes the industry is facing major challenges due to Covid-19 market disruption, very high and volatile feed prices, avian influenza in the northern hemisphere, and some volatility from nations affected by African Swine Fever. As nations reopen their foodservice sectors, the poultry industry will start to recover as more than a third of global poultry consumption is linked to this area. Photo: Bert Jansen
But Rabobank believes that as nations reopen their foodservice sectors, the poultry industry will start to recover as more than a third of global poultry consumption is linked to this area. This in turn will help global traders as stock levels fall.
Chicken producers told to focus on cost reduction via feed formulation as price volatility endures feednavigator.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from feednavigator.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bird Flu Hits Foie Gras Farmers as Lethal Strains Sweep Europe
Bloomberg 1/9/2021 Megan Durisin and Rudy Ruitenberg
(Bloomberg) More than 3.5 million birds across Europe, including the ducks used for France’s famed foie gras, have died from avian flu since October in the most far-reaching outbreak on the continent in four years.
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New cases of highly contagious strains of H5N8 and H5N1 have been found in at least a dozen nations, killing birds or forcing farms to cull poultry to keep the virus at bay, according to data from the Paris-based World Organisation for Animal Health. The casualties include hundreds of thousands of ducks in France as well as turkeys, chickens and egg-laying hens in Poland, the European Union’s top poultry producer.