They fill up barns, pump in heat and the animals die slowly via heat stroke and suffer for a prolonged period of time. Sunce 2022, $715 million in bailouts were given to compensate the agriculture powerhouses for the flocks they culled to prevent the spread of avian flu, which has been wreaking havoc in farmed and wild bird populations for the last two years. Many of the culled birds were apparently flu-free, killed as a precaution to prevent further spread of the devastating virus.
Taxpayers are footing the bill for avian flu while meat industry
profits continue to soar. So far $715 million in government bailouts
has been handed to poultry farmers since mid-2022, according to
reporting by the Food and Environment Reporting Network or FERN’s Ag
Insider and documents shared with Sentient Media. Turkey producer
Jennie-O received the largest payment — equaling more than $88.9
million. Rounding out the top three are Tyson — $29.7 million — and
Rembrandt Enterprises, Inc. — $27.8 million.
The bailouts were given to compensate the agriculture powerhouses
for the flocks they culled to prevent the spread of avian flu, which
has been wreaking havoc in farmed and wild bird populations for the
last two years. Many of the culled birds were apparently flu-free,
killed as a precaution to prevent further spread of the devastating
virus.
Companies See Record Profits, Consumers Foot the Bill
Payouts were made based on what the U.S. Department of Agriculture
determines to be “fair market rate” for the depopulated birds. Even
if only one case of avian flu is confirmed, any and all birds
exposed are culled too. Total casualties from a single case can
reach into the tens of thousands then, due to the sheer size of
factory farms and the barns in which birds are housed.
It’s not just shareholders seeing the profits. Corporate executives
continue to rake in compensation worth millions, despite the ongoing
spread of disease. Tyson’s CEO and President, Donnie King, received
a compensation package worth $13.1 million in 2023 and $12 million
the year prior.
Instead of reducing corporate profits, the cost of avian flu
trickles down to consumers, as the price of eggs creeps upward. At
the end of 2022, the average cost of a dozen eggs in the United
States passed $4, leading many consumers to cut back, even during
the holidays. Meanwhile, the country’s largest egg-producer,
Cal-Maine Foods reported record profits in 2023.
Though there was a lull in new avian flu cases and spread in 2023,
recently cases are once again on the rise, leading economists to
caution that the cost of eggs is likely to creep upward yet again.
Birds Are Awake As They Suffocate
The most popular method to cull the millions of birds impacted by
avian flu — ventilation shutdown plus (VSD+) — is also one of the
cheapest. And according to many veterinarians and animal welfare
groups, it’s one of the cruelest.
The USDA allows VSD+ only in constrained circumstances. The agency’s
stance on VSD+ is heavily informed by the American Veterinary
Medical Association’s depopulation guidelines, which upholds
ventilation shutdown as an acceptable means of culling flocks.
“They fill up barns, pump in heat and the animals die slowly via
heat stroke and suffer for a prolonged period of time,” Crystal
Heath, DVM and spokesperson of the non-profit Our Honor, tells
Sentient Media. It’s likely the birds are “conscious for a prolonged
period of time before they pass from heat.”
According to a physiological analysis, birds culled using VSD+
likely suffer to an extreme degree — enduring pain, nausea and
anxiety in the hours before falling unconscious. The fact that large
corporations that get tens of millions in bailouts aren’t spending
some of that money to adopt more humane methods is “disturbing”,
argues Heath.
Those against using VSD to cull birds argue that it’s not only cruel
but also that it’s simply not the most effective way of preventing
the spread of disease, as it often fails to reach a 100 percent
mortality rate. Those who survive are usually killed by hand using
methods like cervical dislocation — they have their necks broken —
oftentimes hours later, leaving them to continue spreading avian flu
in the interim.
Investigators who visited just a few of many VSD+ depopulated barns
at one Rembrandt Enterprises, Inc. facility in Iowa recorded live
birds alongside those who were killed, suggesting that across the
many barns hundreds of birds likely survived the cull.
There are other options. One example, according to Heath, relies on
nitrogen foam. Compared to VSD+, birds culled using nitrogen foam go
unconscious and at least die more quickly and with less discomfort.
The veterinary industry’s association does include pumping nitrogen
gas into barns or filling them with water-based foam as
alternatives, yet nitrogen foam is completely absent.
Despite these more humane and effective alternatives, only 5.6
million birds were culled using other methods between February and
October 2022. Instead, the poultry industry continues to rely
heavily on VSD+ for depopulation — killing over 41 million birds
during that same time period.
Update: An earlier version of this story noted $493 million in
payouts. An APHIS spokesperson has revealed payouts totaling $715
million. Also, a previous version of this story mentioned “large
corporations that get billions,” now corrected to “millions,” and
per AVMA guidelines, ventilation shutdown without heat is only
acceptable when used on neonates, so “even without the addition of
heat” has been deleted.