97.7 Million Birds Are Already Dead As The Worst Bird Flu Outbreak Ever Sweeps Across North America And Europe

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    by Michael Snyder, End Of The American Dream:

    Did you know that we are in the middle of the worst bird flu outbreak ever recorded?  Millions upon millions of birds have been dying, and most people don’t even realize that such a nightmarish pestilence has been absolutely devastating North America and Europe.  But what people do know is that eggs, chicken and turkey just keep getting more expensive at the grocery store.  In fact, supplies are starting to get so tight that some experts are now talking about the potential for “shortages” during the holiday season.  Unfortunately, this epidemic isn’t going to go away any time soon.  If it was going to go away, it would have done so during the warm summer months.  Now the weather is starting to get colder again, and that means that it will be even easier for the bird flu to spread.

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    What we are witnessing in Europe right now is truly alarming.  According to the official website of the European Food Safety Authority, so far 47.7 million birds have been culled by poultry facilities where cases of the bird flu have been confirmed…

    The ongoing HPAI season has produced the largest epidemic seen so far in Europe, with a total of 2,467 outbreaks in poultry and 47.7 million birds culled in affected establishments. In addition, 187 detections were notified in captive birds and 3,573 HPAI events were recorded in wild birds. The geographical reach of this year’s epidemic is unprecedented, with reported cases ranging from the Svalbard islands in Norway to southern Portugal, and as far east as Ukraine, affecting 37 European countries in total.

    Just think about that.

    At a time when agricultural production is way down all over Europe, this pestilence has already wiped out almost 50 million chickens and turkeys.

    This wasn’t supposed to happen.  The bird flu outbreak in Europe was supposed to greatly subside once summer arrived, but this year that didn’t happen

    In past years, outbreaks of avian flu declined with warmer weather and the end of migration by wild birds in the autumn and winter.

    But outbreaks have continued across the UK and elsewhere in Europe this summer leading to fears that highly pathogenic variants of avian flu are now endemic in wild birds, creating a risk of infection all year.

    So what does this mean?

    Has bird flu developed into a form that is not greatly affected by warmer temperatures?

    The truth is that we just don’t know.

    But what we do know is that bird flu is usually at the worst during the fall and winter

    Bird flu usually strikes during the autumn and winter months. It is transmitted by infected migrating wild birds’ faeces or direct contact with contaminated feed, clothing and equipment.

    “As autumn migration begins and the number of wild birds wintering in Europe increases, they are likely at higher risk of HPAI infection than previous years due to the observed persistence of the virus in Europe,” Guilhem de Seze, a senior official at the EFSA, said in a statement on Monday.

    So things in Europe are not likely to get better any time soon.

    Instead, in all probability they will probably get even worse.

    Meanwhile, the bird flu continues to sweep across North America as well.  At this point, the total death toll on our side of the Atlantic Ocean has reached approximately 50 million

    In North America alone, an estimated 50 million birds have succumbed, which experts say is probably a vast undercount. And though government officials are primarily concerned about poultry farms, the epidemic has struck wild birds, too — from waterfowl to raptors and vultures.

    If we add 47.7 million dead birds in Europe to 50 million dead birds in North America, that gives us a grand total of 97.7 million dead birds.

    And the vast majority of those dead birds are chickens and turkeys.

    This is truly catastrophic, and most people aren’t paying attention.

    But whether people are paying attention or not, prices are just going to keep going higher at the grocery store

    The surge of the flu has led to the price of turkey hens rising 30% higher than last year and 80% higher than before the pandemic, and it appears unlikely that will change before the holidays. “There’s nothing appearing on the horizon to suggest anything new is going to surface to help ease the supply-side pain for Thanksgiving turkeys,” Russ Whitman, senior vice president at commodity researcher Urner Barry, told Bloomberg.

    And the word “shortage” is increasingly being used to describe what we could be facing this upcoming holiday season

    A turkey shortage may impact what’s on the table this holiday season. Grocers and delis alike are running out of the meat, driving the price of poultry even higher amid inflation.

    Why aren’t more people talking about this?

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