Two weeks without answers on african swine fever outbreak origin

Two weeks after detecting an african swine fever outbreak in wild boars in Cerdanyola del Vallés, Barcelona—the first in Spain since 1994—questions about its origin remain unresolved. The hypothesis of a leak from a nearby laboratory experimenting with a modified virus for vaccine development is gaining traction. Authorities urge caution as 16 positives are confirmed in the affected area.

The african swine fever (ASF) outbreak was detected on November 28, 2025, in dead wild boars in Cerdanyola del Vallés, Barcelona province. This lethal viral disease for pigs poses no risk to humans but threatens the pork industry. It is the first focus in Spain since 1994, with 16 positive cases confirmed in wild boars to date, all within the perimetrated zone, without reaching livestock farms.

The investigation keeps several hypotheses open, but a possible leak from the Animal Health Research Center (IRTA-CReSA) in Bellaterra, near the discovery site, stands out. This high-biosecurity facility, attached to the Catalan government, planned experiments with pigs inoculated with a genetically modified version of the ASF virus, specifically the Georgia 2007 strain, to develop a vaccine. The protocol involved 15 animals in three groups over five weeks, from October to November 2025, with blood and saliva sampling to assess immune response.

Analyses from the EU reference laboratory and the CISA-INIA in Madrid revealed that the strain in the wild boars belongs to genetic group 29, similar to group 1 from Georgia 2007, distinct from circulating strains in the EU (groups 2-28). This strain is commonly used in labs for studies and vaccine trials. The Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food raised the possibility of an origin in a biological containment facility on December 5.

IRTA-CReSA has not clarified if experiments were underway on November 28. Its spokeswoman stated: «We are focused on continuing to work on surveillance, analysis, and detection tasks to contribute to containing the current outbreak.» The Ministry for the Ecological Transition confirmed the evaluation of two level 3 activities with modified viruses, one approved by the Interministerial Committee on GMOs.

Catalan Agriculture councillor Òscar Ordeig called for «prudence» and «not drawing hasty conclusions,» pledging transparency once the origin is scientifically confirmed. The Catalan government assures that containment measures are working well.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Woman in hospital bed at Barcelona clinic appearing healthy after negative hantavirus test
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Woman isolated in Barcelona tests negative in second hantavirus PCR

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

The woman under observation at Barcelona's Hospital Clínic after contact with a hantavirus case has tested negative in her second PCR. Sources from the Generalitat's Health Department report she remains asymptomatic and in good general health.

The Spanish government has confirmed that the MV Hondius cruise ship, carrying a hantavirus outbreak, will dock in Tenerife within three days. The decision follows a formal request from the World Health Organization. Foreign passengers will be repatriated and the 14 Spaniards will quarantine in Madrid.

Iniulat ng AI

The Agricultural and Livestock Service confirmed the first case of highly pathogenic avian influenza in a wild bird in the Atacama Region.

Horse owners and vets are being urged to report all cases of equine flu as experts say the true number of outbreaks is significantly higher than current figures show.

Iniulat ng AI

Spain's Public Health Commission has updated its protocol and set may 10 as day zero, extending the 42-day quarantine until june 21. The measure follows WHO recommendations and allows external visits starting next week if tests are negative.

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan