Bird flu: second premises near Hadleigh, Babergh, Suffolk (AIV 2022/89)

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 was confirmed in poultry on 4 October 2022.

18 February 2023: Following successful completion of disease control activities and surveillance within the zone, the 10km Surveillance Zone has been revoked.

4 December 2022: Following successful completion of disease control activities and surveillance in the zone, the 3km protection zone has ended and the area formed by the protection zone becomes a surveillance zone.

All poultry on the premises have been humanely culled.

Details can be found in Revocation of the avian influenza surveillance zone (PDF)

This revokes the Declaration of the ending of a Protection Zone near Hadleigh, Babergh, Suffolk (AIV 2022/89) and the area that formed that Protection Zone becomes part of the Surveillance Zone (PDF).

This revokes and replaces: Declaration of a protection zone and a surveillance zone near Hadleigh, Babergh, Suffolk

Check the updated bird flu disease control zone map.

Check if you need a licence to move poultry, poultry by-products, eggs, material or mammals.

Published 27 October 2022
Last updated 18 February 2023 + show all updates
  1. Following successful completion of disease control activities and surveillance within the zone, the 10km Surveillance Zone has been revoked.

  2. Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 was confirmed in poultry and other captive birds on 4 October 2022 at a second premises near Hadleigh, Babergh, Suffolk (AIV 2022/89). Following successful completion of disease control activities and surveillance in the zone, the 3km protection zone has ended and the area formed by the protection zone becomes a surveillance zone.

  3. Correcting error. The 3km protection zone and 10km surveillance zones are still in place around this premises.

  4. Following successful completion of disease control activities and surveillance in the zones, the 3km protection zone has ended and the area that formed the protection zone becomes part of the 10 km surveillance zone.

  5. First published.