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New South Wales third Australian state to confirm H5N1 bird flu case

Reuters
Sydney, Australia
Sun, July 5, 2026 Published on Jul. 5, 2026 Published on 2026-07-05T12:49:41+07:00

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A test tube labeled “bird flu“, eggs and a piece of paper in the colors of the Australian national flag are seen in this picture illustration taken on Jan. 14, 2023. A test tube labeled “bird flu“, eggs and a piece of paper in the colors of the Australian national flag are seen in this picture illustration taken on Jan. 14, 2023. (Reuters/Dado Ruvic)

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ew South Wales became Australia's third state to confirm a case of H5N1 bird flu after authorities said a migratory seabird found near a coastal town returned a positive result for the highly pathogenic virus.

Australia last month became the final continent to confirm a mainland case of H5N1, although the ​virus had been detected in late 2025 on the sub-Antarctic territory of ​Heard Island, about 4,100 kilometers from continental Australia.

Six infections have now been confirmed across three states, including in a seabird called the giant petrel found near the seaside town of Hawks Nest in New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, the authorities said late on Saturday.

The H5 strain has ​led to the culling of hundreds of millions of birds in the past few years, ⁠disrupting food supplies and driving up prices. Human infections of the virus remain rare.

"The positive test is the first confirmed detection of H5 in New South Wales," state Agriculture Minister Tara Moriarty said in a statement.

There is "no evidence of spread to local wildlife and H5 bird flu has not been detected in commercial poultry flocks, captive birds or any other birds in New South Wales", Moriarty said. "There is no impact on the supply of chicken meat or eggs and I would encourage everyone to purchase these products as they normally would."

The state government has launched a response plan that includes bolstered surveillance operations and the deployment of extra staff to support industry, she said.

Authorities in Australia have ramped up surveillance and testing of wildlife and ‌livestock since the avian flu hit the mainland, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledging his Labor government to do all it can to curb any spread of the virus.

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