The Russian government has drafted a plan to introduce a compartmentalisation system in the poultry industry to combat avian influenza. The approach will be similar to the one existing in the pig industry, where it has proved its value in combating African Swine Fever.
Russian authorities have published a draft decree under which the compartmentalisation system will be put in place on 1 March 2025, to be valid at least through 1 March 2031. Similar to the pig industry, the plan envisages dividing all poultry farms into 4 categories, or compartments, depending on their level of biological protection. Compartments 1 and 2 are assigned to farms with a low or poor level of biological protection, while compartment 3 is to farms with a standard protection level.
Almost all Russian industrial pig farms have compartment 4, indicating they comply with the strictest veterinary rules. Its main advantage is that it allows pig farms located in a territory affected by ASF to continue selling products outside the region, even overseas.
It is expected that the poultry farms with the highest compartment will be eligible to continue poultry exports even appearing in the quarantine zone, providing that bird flu is not registered at the facility. In the decree’s explanatory note, the Russian Agricultural Ministry claimed that the compartment system would secure trade advantages for the Russian poultry industry.
The Ministry said, “[These will involve] simplified export procedures, improving the epizootiological situation at poultry farming facilities, and ensuring the veterinary safety of poultry products.”
The draft regulation indicates how the owner can apply for inspection of poultry production facilities to determine their animal health status. The authorities revealed that the Russian veterinary agencies would carry out the inspection free of charge.
Russian poultry farms asked the Russian veterinary watchdog Rosselhoznadzor to introduce the compartmentalisation system, Sergey Dankvert, head of Rosselhoznadzor, disclosed in April 2023. He also criticised the way the veterinary system is organised at Western poultry farms.
“Those losses [due to bird flu] they suffer in Europe, America, even Japan are predictable because they opted for not strengthening biological protection, or, as we name it, compartmentalisation, but follow the green path – that the birds need to walk, breathe fresh air and not to live in cages,” Dankvert stated at that time.
"*" indicates required fields
Notifications
Your Privacy Matters
It's your legal right to choose which information a website may store and have access to. With your permission, we and our third-party partners (19) store and/or access information on a device, such as unique identifiers in cookies and browsing data to collect and process personal data.
We and our partners do the following data processing:
Store and/or access information on a device, Advertising based on limited data and advertising measurement, Personalised content, content measurement, audience research, and services development
If you accept any or all of these, you will have agreed to this website's use of cookies for these purposes. You may also choose to refuse consent, but certain personalized features of the site won't be available to you.