Deandrea Hamilton
Editor
The USA, February 17, 2025 – Experts in the United States say it is the worst outbreak of Bird Flu in history for the country; it amounts to a 13% drop in production. It’s a supply shortage that continues to spell disaster on US dependent countries like The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos, which have also seen costs for eggs rocket since last month.
A Thursday interview on Fox & Friends has captured our attention. It features Brian Moscogiuri, Vice-president of Eggs Unlimited.
“We’re just trying to figure out, and the farmers are trying to figure out, how the virus is getting in… there’s several different catalysts, including wild migratory birds that have been flying over the country in the fall, in the spring each year… And we’re also wondering, is it in the ground? Is it in the air on these farms? Some of these farms that have been able to clean out and are working on repopulating have actually been hit again,” Moscogiuri said.
This problem has been growing, creeping in since 2022 according to the businessman who also shared that 120 million chickens have been eradicated in order to slow or stop the spread of the pathogen.
Eggs Unlimited is one of the largest international suppliers of eggs, servicing major retailers, distributors and food service companies, said a Fox News online report. Supply is down and demand is so high, that stores are having to impose daily purchasing limits on consumers to one carton per day.
“There’s less eggs available. Right now, we’re really focused on making sure that our customers are getting the orders and their supply, and making sure that they have eggs on their shelves. For consumers, [we’re] trying to limit their impact with the pricing and the supply chain shortages that we’re currently seeing right now.”
And it’s not just consumption that is suffering. There are actually people getting sick and a mystery is brewing over why the CDC is falling short of reporting vital data, which used to go directly to medical practitioners.
“CDC right now is not reporting influenza data through the WHO global platforms, FluNet [and] FluID, that they’ve been providing information [on] for many, many years,” Maria Van Kerkhove, interim director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness at the WHO, said at a Feb. 12 press briefing. “We are communicating with them,” she added, “but we haven’t heard anything back.”
There had been two reports last year of Bird Flu picked in patients in Missouri and Louisiana. This week, three cases of the virus were detected in Ohio. It is unclear what the strains are, and there is concern that more dangerous mutations could come if the rate of contamination is not contained.
For certain, the cost of eggs will continue to rise and it comes amidst disappointing news on US inflation, which also rose 3% according to the Federal Reserve.