
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.
The training follows confirmed H5 detections in wild seabirds, including cases in South Australia, Western Australia and New South Wales. Authorities have continued to emphasise an important distinction for producers: detections have been in wild birds, with no evidence at this stage of infection in commercial poultry or the wider agricultural production system.
For farm operators, that reassurance matters, but it should not become complacency. H5 is a reminder that emerging disease risks can move quickly from environmental concern to operational disruption. Poultry businesses are the most obvious audience, but mixed farms, smallholders, feed suppliers, contractors and properties with dams, wetlands or free-ranging birds should also be paying attention.
The practical message is simple: early detection, clear reporting pathways and disciplined on-farm hygiene can reduce the chance of a suspected disease event becoming a broader business interruption. Sick or dead wild birds should not be handled. Locations should be recorded, photos taken only where safe, and suspected cases reported through the proper animal disease channels.
From an insurance perspective, the latest development is a timely prompt to review what is actually covered. Standard farm insurance coverage may protect buildings, machinery, liability and some business assets, but disease, contamination, quarantine restrictions, livestock losses and income interruption can be treated very differently from one policy to another. Some losses may be excluded unless specific extensions apply.
Producers should consider whether their current risk plan covers the following:
This is also where farm insurance brokers can add value. A broker familiar with agricultural risks can help identify policy gaps before a claim situation arises, especially where disease response, livestock protection and interruption cover intersect.
The SA training rollout is not a cause for panic. It is an example of surveillance becoming more local, more collaborative and more responsive. For farmers, the smartest response is to treat it as a reminder: biosecurity and insurance are not separate conversations. Together, they form part of the same business resilience plan.
Published:Tuesday, 14th 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.
Rate this article
0 Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.