CHINA

China tightens border controls, culls cattle amid foot-and-mouth outbreak

Beef

China has tightened border controls, fast-tracked vaccines and begun culling cattle after a small outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in ‌the northwest that officials say entered from abroad, informs Reuters.

Posted on Apr 07 ,00:25

China tightens border controls, culls cattle amid foot-and-mouth outbreak

The Ministry of Agriculture said last weekend it had started culling animals and disinfecting affected areas after outbreaks hit herds totalling 6,229 cattle in Gansu province and the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

Industry analysts said it was the first time the SAT-1 serotype—a type of the disease endemic in Africa—had been detected in China, and that existing domestic vaccines for the more common O and A serotypes do not provide protection.

Since 2025 SAT-1 has spread ⁠from Africa to parts of the Middle East, West Asia and South Asia.

Authorities said the outbreak entered China via the northwest border, a region that touches Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia and other countries.

Border provinces including Xinjiang and Gansu were ordered to step up patrols and prevent the disease entering through smuggling or illegal transport, according to official notices.

"The current outbreak threatens a large region and prevention and control are under severe pressure," said Rosa Wang, analyst from Shanghai JC Intelligence Co.

The outbreak comes as Russia battles a severe cattle disease outbreak in the Siberian Novosibirsk region, which borders Kazakhstan and is about 1200 km (750 miles) and 2500 km, respectively from the outbreak sites in Xinjiang and Gansu.

In a report published on March 20, the U.S. Department of ‌Agriculture ⁠said the scale of China's response may indicate an unconfirmed outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease. Russia has denied any such outbreak.

Animal diseases have previously crossed into China from Russia, including African swine fever in 2018 and foot-and mouth serotype O in 2000 and 2014.

"It is not out of the question that China could adopt restrictions on Russian livestock products if it has reason to believe the transmission originated there," said Even Pay, director at Trivium ⁠China. "But it's more challenging if such outbreaks aren't reported."

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