Taiwan’s government has allocated 1 billion New Taiwan dollars (US$30 million) toward plastic and steel netting, which will be used to cover the island’s 20,000 poultry and pig farms.
Farm owners are expected to cover half of the costs, and are willing to do so because the netting will also stop birds from stealing feed.
Each September, wild birds migrate to Taiwan across Japan and Korea or over the east coast of China, which has suffered at least 14 human deaths from bird flu since 2003.
Taiwan has not reported any human cases of H5N1, but several fowl smuggled from China tested positive for the
avian influenza virus last year.
Huang Kuo-chin, an Agricultural Council official in charge of quarantine, said the first farms to get the nets were those near marshes and swamps where migratory birds settle.
Taiwan has also set up 10 stations to monitor migratory birds and created an alert system to be activated if any of the birds are found to be carrying H5N1.
“Although we haven’t had any confirmed bird flu cases, Taiwan is one of the Southeast Asian countries that has taken the most stringent precautionary measures,” Huang said.
Taiwanese quarantine officials will visit their counterparts on the mainland later this month to track the routes of migratory birds and seek more effective measures to prevent bird flu.