U.S. will spend up to $1 billion to combat bird flu, USDA secretary says

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The U.S. will invest up to $1 billion to combat the spread of bird flu, including increasing imports of eggs, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Wednesday.

A three-year bird flu outbreak in U.S. poultry has killed 166 million chickens since 2022, according to USDA data.

The virus has also infected nearly 1,000 dairy herds and almost 70 people, including one death, since early 2024.

The USDA will spend up to $500 million to provide free biosecurity audits to farms and $400 million to increase payment rates to farmers who need to kill their chickens due to bird flu, Rollins said at a conference of state agriculture officials.

Some of the money will come from cuts to USDA spending by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, Rollins said Wednesday in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.

The USDA is exploring vaccines for chickens but is not yet authorizing their use, Rollins said. The poultry industry is divided on whether to vaccinate chickens because of potential trade implications.

The administration plans to increase imports and decrease exports of eggs to boost domestic supply and combat record high egg prices, Rollins said. Turkey has said it will export 15,000 tons of eggs to the U.S. through July.

Last May, the administration of former President Joe Biden allocated more than $800 million to combat bird flu in livestock. About $450 million of that money is still available, a USDA official said on Tuesday at the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture conference.

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