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H5 Bird Flu Detections: What Farm Operators Should Review Now

Biosecurity, business interruption and livestock cover deserve a closer look

H5 Bird Flu Detections: What Farm Operators Should Review Now?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

Australia’s H5 bird flu situation has moved quickly, with authorities responding to new detections in migratory seabirds, including a confirmed case in New South Wales and further concerns in Western Australia.
Importantly for producers, officials have continued to stress that there is currently no evidence of infection in poultry or the wider agricultural production system, and the public health risk remains low.

Even so, the development is a timely reminder that biosecurity is not just an animal health issue. For poultry, egg, free-range, mixed farming and agritourism enterprises, a disease scare can affect labour planning, visitor access, supply contracts, animal movements and cash flow. The national emergency animal disease committee has supported heightened flock biosecurity, with states and territories able to advise commercial poultry operators to house free-range birds where practical while maintaining animal welfare.

For farm businesses, the insurance lesson is straightforward: do not wait until a confirmed on-farm event to understand what is and is not covered. Disease-related losses can be treated very differently from storm, fire, theft or machinery damage. Some policies may respond to livestock mortality, clean-up costs or certain interruption scenarios, while others may exclude contagious disease, government-imposed restrictions or losses linked to market access disruption. Reviewing farm insurance coverage before an incident gives producers more room to identify gaps.

Good records will also matter. If a claim or financial support application follows a biosecurity incident, insurers and authorities may look for evidence of flock numbers, mortality records, visitor logs, vehicle movements, feed and water sources, cleaning procedures, and advice followed from veterinarians or government agencies. These documents are not just paperwork; they help demonstrate that a business took reasonable steps to reduce risk.

Practical actions for farmers include:

  • checking poultry, livestock and business interruption sections for disease-related wording;
  • confirming whether extra costs, quarantine impacts or loss of income are addressed;
  • updating biosecurity plans for staff, contractors, visitors and vehicles;
  • reporting sick or dead birds without handling them; and
  • speaking with farm insurance brokers if policy wording is unclear.

This is not a signal for panic, but it is a signal for preparation. The farms best placed to manage uncertainty are usually those that have already mapped their exposure, tightened biosecurity, and aligned insurance settings with the real risks of operating in a changing disease environment.

Published:Sunday, 5th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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