Calls for global closure of mink fur farms as Dutch government orders cull and confirms mink fur farms could act as reservoir for COVID-19
Fur Free Alliance & One Voice urge governments to close mink farms in all countries
Crédit photo: Ongehoord
Fur Free Alliance & One Voice urge governments to close mink farms in all countries
Vannes (4 June 2020) – The Dutch government has ordered the culling of thousands of mink on nine fur farms from Friday this week, following advice from a team of veterinary and infectious disease experts that mink fur farms could act as a reservoir for SARS-COV-2, allowing it to remain in circulation for a long time.
Dutch MPs were notified of the cabinet decision in a letter sent last night by the Dutch Agriculture Minister and the Minister for Public Health, Welfare & Sport. The investigation by the Dutch Zoonoses Outbreak Management Team follows the Dutch Agriculture Minister’s statement on 25th May that it was ‘extremely likely’ that two fur farm workers in the Netherlands had contracted COVID-19 from mink infected with SARS-CoV-2.
In response to the Dutch government’s findings, the Fur Free Alliance is calling for the global closure of mink fur farms as potential reservoirs for COVID-19 and other novel infectious zoonotic diseases.
Mink fur farming was banned in the Netherlands in 2013 with a deadline for complete phase out by 2024. The Netherlands farmed around 4.5million mink in 2018. The Fur Free Alliance is supporting calls by Dutch animal organisations for the closure of the approximately 128 fur farms that remain to be speeded up in light of the COVID-19 risk.
Joh Vinding, Chair of the Fur Free Alliance, said:
SARS-CoV-2 was first identified on two mink farms in Netherlands on 26 April, and then subsequently on two more mink farms in Noord Brabant on 9 May. By 15 May SARS-CoV-2 had also been diagnosed in three living at a mink farm, and on 19 May Dutch Agriculture Minister Carola Schouten told MPs that mink to human infection was likely. When a second farm worker subsequently contracted COVID-19, the Minister confirmed, on 25 May, that transmission from mink to humans was now “extremely likely”.
The Ministers’ letter to the Dutch Parliament notes that more infections are expected to be detected in the coming weeks, and that as human-human infection rates decline, mink-human infection could increase the incidence of SARS-CoV-2 in humans. All fur farms in the Netherlands are now undergoing mandatory screening, and measures have been put in place including a restriction on both farm visitors and the transportation of mink.
Non-infected farms will be required to continue to follow current measures and to submit carcasses of “naturally” deceased animals each week. The Ministers’ letter states that the Dutch cabinet is considering whether and how to support fur farms to voluntarily terminate their businesses before the 2024 deadline.
The Fur Free Alliance and One Voice are deeply concerned about the welfare of the mink who contract this potentially fatal virus. Research from the farms in the Netherlands has shown that symptoms can cause “digestive and respiratory” issues and can prove fatal for the animals. Mink can also experience the virus without showing symptoms. Therefore, in addition to calling for a complete ban on fur farming, the organisations are also calling on France government to take immediate steps to investigate the potential spread of the disease on farms in France, including mandatory testing on all mink farms with the publication of the results as soon as possible, plus the introduction of measures already undertaken in the Netherlands, such as a ban on any movement of mink, including international imports and exports, the restriction of visitors to the farms and the use of PPE for all staff and visitors.
Mink fur farms and COVID-19 timeline
- 26 April: SARS-CoV-2 identified on two mink farms in Netherlands.
- 9 May: SARS-CoV-2 found on two more mink farms in Noord Brabant as well as in dust particles in the barns in which they are kept in.
- 15 May: SARS-CoV-2 diagnosed in three cats living at a mink farm where the presence of the virus was detected.
- 19 May: First farm worker reported to have contracted COVID-19; Minister confirms compulsory screening is extended to all mink farms in the Netherlands.
- 20 May: Dutch Agriculture Minister Carola Schouten tells MPs it is likely mink infected with SARS-CoV-2 passed the virus to a worker.
- 22 May 2020: Seven of 14 employees of a mink farm in La Puebla de Valverde (Spain) test positive for SARS-CoV-2.
- 25 May: A second farm worker contracts COVID-19, Minister confirms transmission from mink to humans now “extremely likely.”
- 28 May: Ministers’ confirm mandatory screening of all Dutch mink farms is underway.
- 1 June: SARS-Cov-2 found on another three mink fur farms in the Netherlands, with a fourth case confirmed on 3 June bringing the total to nine farms.
- 3 June Dutch Ministers publish final report confirming animals on the infected farms will be culled, a measure taken “in the interests of both public and animal health”.
The other main species reared on fur farms – foxes and raccoon dogs – are known to be able to become infected with SARS-CoV-related viruses, with the potential to act as intermediate hosts to pass viruses to humans. Raccoon dogs and foxes in wildlife markets in China were both found to have been infected with SARS-CoV.
Fur farming has been banned across the UK since 2003, and has been prohibited and/or is in the process of being phased-out in the following European countries: Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Czech Republic, Croatia, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Norway, Luxembourg, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, and most recently the government in Ireland has committed to ending fur farming. Bulgaria, Lithuania, Montenegro and Ukraine are also presently considering bans on fur farming. In the United States, California became the first US state to ban fur sales in 2019 following similar bans in cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Berkeley and West Hollywood. In 2020, legislators in Hawaii and Rhode Island introduced fur sales ban proposals, as have cities in Minnesota and Massachusetts.
Fur farming, however, continues in other countries with China, Denmark, Finland and Poland being the biggest producers, and globally an estimated 100 million animals are killed annually for their fur.
Latest available figures show approximately 35 million mink were farmed across twenty-one countries in Europe, including Denmark (17.6m), Poland (5m), Netherlands (4.5m), Finland (1.85m), Greece and Lithuania (both 1.2m), in 2018. Figures for the same period show that mink were farmed for their fur in China (20.7m), the United States (3.1m) and Canada (1.7m), bringing the total to approximately 60.5million mink.