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Potential economic consequences of African swine fever in Australia

Authors :
Slatyer, Rachel
Hafi, Ahmed
Richards, Kirsty
Cozens, Mark
Addai, Donkor
Cao, LY
Mornement, Chris
Keighley, Miles
Arthur, Tony
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Australian Bureau of Agricultural Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose African Swine Fever (ASF) is a serious disease that impacts on domestic pig production. It has no approved vaccines or effective treatments. The potential costs of ASF entering Australia include the costs of eradication, costs to industry until the disease is eradicated, and long-term costs of ASF’s presence should eradication prove economically or technically infeasible. The analysis in this report estimated the costs to the economy of 2 plausible scenarios for an ASF incursion into Australia - incursions into either the feral pig population or the domestic production system - as well as the costs of ASF becoming endemic. Key findings • A small-scale outbreak of ASF in feral pigs followed by eradication of the disease was estimated to cost 101 million to 127 million Dollar. • A small-scale outbreak of ASF in domestic pigs followed by eradication of the disease was estimated to cost 117 million to 263 million Dollar. • Larger outbreaks would cost more and make eradication more difficult, particularly outbreaks in the feral population. • Endemic ASF was estimated to cost between about 0.4 billion and 2.5 billion Dollar. • The estimated cost of endemic ASF was influenced by the rate at which it spreads through the country, which in turn influences the extent to which enhanced biosecurity practices across the Australian pork supply chain and heightened surveillance activities are implemented, the frequency of spillover into the production system, and the cost of spillover events.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5a97abcb0c6edcaff71d4640cd034925
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.25814/rznz-8y79