SHARE
COPY LINK

FARMING

Case of African swine fever confirmed in northern Italy

A case of African swine fever has been detected in a wild boar in Italy, news agency ANSA said Friday, raising fears of a blow to the country's meat industry.

A wild boar on the streets of Rome.
A wild boar on the streets of Rome. African Swine Fever is endemic in Sardinia and has been reported in 32 countries in five different world regions since January 2020. Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

Highly transmissible and fatal for pig populations, African swine fever (ASF) does not present a risk for human health, but risks serious repercussions for pork producers.

Italy, with about 8.9 million pigs, is the seventh biggest pork producer in the European Union, representing an 8 billion euro ($9.1 billion) industry, according to the agricultural association Confagricoltura.

ANSA said the case of the viral disease was detected after tests on the carcass of a wild boar in Ovada in the northern Piedmont region.

The regional research body reported to have carried out the tests could not be reached for confirmation later on Friday.

African swine fever has existed in Africa for decades.

In Italy, it has been endemic on the island of Sardinia since first appearing in 1978.

The disease spread to China — the world’s largest pork producer — in 2018, causing millions of pigs to be slaughtered to prevent an epidemic.

In western Europe, the virus was reported in Belgium in 2018, prompting China to ban all imports of Belgian pork.

After Germany confirmed its first case in a dead wild boar in 2020, China, Japan and South Korea, alongside Brazil and Argentina, also suspended German pork imports.

ANSA said the case in Italy had been referred to Italy’s health ministry, which in turn would notify the World Organisation of Animal Health (OIE) and the European Commission.

In a December 3rd situation report on the virus, the OIE said African swine fever has been reported in 32 countries in five different world regions since January 2020.

It has affected more than one million pigs and more than 28,000 wild boar around the world.

“The events observed in the last six months confirm the global threat of ASF, which continues to spread with serious impacts on pig production systems, animal health and welfare, as well as the socio-economic impacts on livelihoods, national food security and international trade,” the report said.

After Germany’s first case, Confagricoltura said Italy had activated a plan of surveillance and prevention approved by the European Commission since the beginning of 2020.

READ ALSO:

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

PROTESTS

Italian farmers stage symbolic protest by Rome’s Colosseum

Following weeks of small demonstrations held across the country, Italian farmers took their protest to Rome on Friday, driving a four-tractor convoy past the Colosseum.

Italian farmers stage symbolic protest by Rome's Colosseum

The tractors – one of them green, one white and one red, representing the colours of Italy’s national flag – were part of a group of over 500 that have been parked on the northern outskirts of the capital for several days, awaiting permission to enter the city.

The farmers want a formal meeting with PM Giorgia Meloni’s government to discuss their complaints, which range from tax cuts to a review of European Union environmental regulations that they say are damaging their livelihoods.

READ ALSO: Will farmers’ protests block Italy’s roads on Friday?

“EU policies are putting us in serious difficulty,” Elia Fornai, a 26-year-old farmer from Tuscany, told AFP at the camp earlier this week.

“We have no taste for protesting. We want to go home as soon as possible – but with new programmes for a better future for agriculture.”

Farmers across Europe have staged protests in recent weeks over shrinking incomes, rising costs and what they say are increasingly onerous environmental rules approved by the 27-nation EU.

Farmers, Rome

Italian farmers drive their tractors in front of Rome’s Colosseum in protest against EU agricultural policies and high taxation on February 9th 2024. Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP

The Italian farmers are not a homogenous group, with no one clear leader.

But many complain about imports of food from outside the EU that is not subject to the same regulations, and want tax cuts, including on fuel.

READ ALSO: Tractors converge on Rome as farmers protest across Europe

Meloni has expressed sympathy with the farmers, saying the EU rules are “ideological”, but said her government had already taken action to support the industry.

This includes allocating an extra three billion euros from Italy’s share of the EU’s post-Covid recovery fund to the agriculture sector, thus bringing the total to eight.

But the government’s latest budget did not extend an income tax exemption for farmers that had been in force since 2017.

Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said on Thursday he was evaluating whether or not to extend it.

SHOW COMMENTS