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Mandatory Daily Record of Production and Raw Material UtilisationHeritage Foods inaugurates new Ice Cream PlantFSSAI makes registration to all milk vendors in IndiaGujarat Ice Cream Makers Face Cone ShortageSummer Heat to Stress India’s Dairy Cold Chain

Indian Dairy News

Dairy Sector a ‘Safety Net’ for Farmers: NABARD
Mar 14, 2026

Dairy Sector a ‘Safety Net’ for Farmers: NABARD

The Chairman of National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development, Shaji K V, has highlighted the crucial role of India’s dairy industry in protecting rural livelihoods, describing it as a “safety n...Read More

Bihar Dairy Officer Arrested in ₹30,000 Bribery Case
Mar 14, 2026

Bihar Dairy Officer Arrested in ₹30,000 Bribery Case

A field officer of the district dairy development department in Bihar was arrested by the Vigilance Investigation Bureau (VIB) for allegedly accepting a bribe of ₹30,000 in West Champaran district. Th...Read More

Hatsun Agro Shares Rise After Milk Mantra Merger
Mar 14, 2026

Hatsun Agro Shares Rise After Milk Mantra Merger

The shares of Hatsun Agro Product Limited gained investor attention after the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), Cuttack Bench, approved the merger of its wholly owned subsidiary Milk Mantra Dairy...Read More

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Mandatory Daily Record of Production and Raw Material Utilisation
Mar 14, 2026

Mandatory Daily Record of Production and Raw Material Utilisation

I recently reviewed the notification issued by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India in the context of Schedule IV of the Food Safety and Standards (Licensing and Registration of Food Busin...Read More

FSSAI makes registration to all milk vendors in India
Mar 13, 2026

FSSAI makes registration to all milk vendors in India

The recent advisory issued by Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) mandating registration of milk vendors is a timely and progressive step towards strengthening traceability and accou...Read More

Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?
Mar 10, 2026

Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?

The recent editorial “Bitter Milk” published by The Hindu raises important concerns about food safety in India. The editorial deserves appreciation for attempting to broaden the conversation and under...Read More

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?
Mar 05, 2026

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?

The recent round of retail milk price increases across South India and Maharashtra is no longer an episodic adjustment but a clear signal of structural stress building up in India’s milk economy. Over...Read More

Global Dairy News

Global Dairy Commodity Prices Show Signs of Rally
Mar 14, 2026

Global Dairy Commodity Prices Show Signs of Rally

Global dairy commodity prices have shown a rally in the first quarter of 2026, particularly for products originating from Australia and New Zealand, according to a new Q1 Global Dairy Quarterly report...Read More

How Walmart Keeps Great Value Milk So Affordable
Mar 14, 2026

How Walmart Keeps Great Value Milk So Affordable

Retail giant Walmart has managed to keep the price of its private-label Great Value milk significantly lower than many competing brands through a vertically integrated dairy supply chain and direct co...Read More

Lactose-Free Milk Seen as Growth Driver in Coffee
Mar 13, 2026

Lactose-Free Milk Seen as Growth Driver in Coffee

Lactose-free milk is emerging as a major growth opportunity for the dairy industry, particularly in the rapidly expanding coffee and café segment. A recent US-based study highlighted that lactose-free...Read More

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Is avian influenza a threat to the dairy industry?

By DairyNews7x7•Published on May 04, 2024

Is avian influenza a threat to the dairy industry?
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The ongoing highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza – commonly known as bird flu – outbreak is one of the hardest hitting in history. Since 2020, it has led to the deaths of “an unprecedented number of deaths in wild birds and poultry”, according to the WHO. It spread to North America in 2021 and has wreaked havoc on poultry populations since then, leading to the suspension of meat sales from certain states earlier this month.

More concerning still is the spread from poultry to mammal populations, particularly cows. At the time of writing, 34 herds of dairy cattle across nine US states are confirmed to be affected, raising fears in the media over a lack of testing. This is due in part to the confirmation that the disease has spread in at least one case from cattle to humans. Since the Covid-19 pandemic, governments and the general public are naturally worried about the costs of ignoring up-and-coming public health risks, especially of the zoonotic kind.

There is good news, however. Only dairy cattle have been infected so far and the spread of the infection, too, appears to be low.

In an interview with Just Food, Alexander Anton, secretary general of the European Dairy Association (EDA), said: “You have 33 dairy holdings that are affected out of around 30,000 in the US. In Europe, in terms of poultry – the species that is most concerned by avian influenza – we haven’t seen a lot of outbreaks last year. We’ve known for at least ten years that it spreads to other animals. We had foxes ten years ago but we haven’t seen anything at European level [for cattle].”

Anton also noted that it is currently flu season and expects the spread to slow as the weather warms.

From the available evidence, it also seems pasteurisation is capable of deactivating the virus, keeping milk and cheese safe even if unknowingly taken from sick cows. This is good news for producers, as the US Food and Drug Administration has also found that one in five of its tested retail samples contain viral fragments of HPAI.

 

Mitigation

Tracking and containing the virus remains vitally important. While many cows appear to be asymptomatic, and still capable of producing milk, the risks of further mutation increase the more widely the disease is spread.

Dr. Daisy May, veterinary surgeon and current writer for All About Parrots, told Just Food: “The public health risks remain relatively low for the time being. But we have to take this incursion into the cattle industry extremely seriously from a food supply standpoint.

“Intensive testing and monitoring on farms, at auctions, processing facilities – anywhere cattle co-mingle – will be absolutely critical for early detection and containing hot spots. Depopulation and virus elimination protocols may need to be activated at any newly identified infected premises to prevent further spread.”

Testing will reduce international fears over US beef and dairy supplies, Dr. May said. “You can bet international trade partners will be scrutinising the US response closely, too, looking for any chance to rationalise import restrictions that could devastate the beef and dairy industries economically.”

The US dairy export market is worth around $8bn and the beef market nearly $10bn. Beef currently seems unaffected by the virus according to USDA tests, but that hasn't stopped Colombia becoming the first country to impose restrictions on US beef from states where dairy cattle are infected.

Despite the low public health risk, Dr. May still sees the coming months as key to maintaining faith in the industry. “From my point of view, this is one of those make-or-break moments where coordination between state/federal animal health officials, industry groups, producers and veterinarians on the ground is paramount. We can't afford a disjointed, piecemeal effort against a virus continuing to prove its ability to adapt and find new hosts.”

 

US domestic outlook

The export market for dairy, while large in absolute terms, is minimal compared to its domestic sales. Luckily for producers, there do not appear to have been any notable impacts on supply.

The latest US Department of Agriculture (USDA) report, published on 17 April, suggests that dairy yield was down around 0.4% year-on-year in February, continuing an eight-month-long trend, and makes no mention of avian flu as a cause. Dairy prices remain stable, with decreases in wholesale milk and cheese costs and minor increases in those of butter.

The major industry association National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) is also keen to highlight that thus far risks to public health and the supply chain remain low.

“It’s important to remember what this situation is and what it isn’t,” Alan Bjerga, the NMPF's executive vice president of communications and industry relations, said.

 

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