Important Takeaways:
- Egg Prices Hit $9 A Dozen In California Amid Bird Flu Outbreak
- Outbreaks of avian influenza in 7 states widely continue to disrupt the industry’s egg supply
- Egg prices continue to move higher due to limited inventory due to an avian flu outbreak.
- The volume of trailer load loose egg sales decreased 16% at the end of January.
- Prices for white large shell eggs hit $8.97 per dozen.
- Delivered prices on the California-compliant wholesale loose egg market increased $0.37 to $8.72 per dozen in the last week of January, according to the Department of Agriculture.
- The record or near-record high prices are causing restaurants to raise prices.
- Waffle House recently announced a 50-cent an egg surcharge.
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Important Takeaways:
- Dozens of newly confirmed cases of avian influenza in wild birds and the first verified U.S. case of a new strain of the virus are raising concern the bird flu crisis may be entering a troubling new phase.
- Why it matters: While the developments don’t necessarily raise the risk of a pandemic, they could create more havoc for farmers, exacerbate egg shortages and expose more gaps in government disease surveillance.
- Driving the news: The Department of Agriculture last week confirmed 81 detections of highly pathogenic avian flu in wild birds collected across 24 states between Dec. 29 and Jan. 17.
- Wild birds can be infected and show no signs of illness, allowing them to spread the virus to new areas and potentially expose domestic poultry.
- Officials in Pennsylvania and New York have culled thousands of wild geese, as well as commercial poultry flocks, after detecting cases of flu.
- What they’re saying: “If you look at what’s happened the last eight weeks, the number of poultry operations that have gone down — and more recently, the duck operations — is absolutely stunning,” Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota told Axios.
- Catch up quick: The bird flu crisis has struck 113 flocks in the past 30 days, affecting more than 19 million birds, per USDA. It’s also been confirmed in 943 dairy herds, the vast majority in California.
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