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Oct 27, 2025

Bluetongue outbreak near Czech border triggers new livestock-transport checks

Bluetongue outbreak near Czech border triggers new livestock-transport checks
The World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) notified member states on 27 October that Poland has recorded its first bluetongue virus case of the season—a single cow in Kędzierzyn-Koźle, Opole voivodeship, 40 km from the Czech frontier. Although bluetongue poses no risk to people, EU rules require affected countries to impose movement controls on live ruminants within a 150-km radius of an outbreak.

Poland’s Chief Veterinary Inspectorate (GIW) reacted by designating temporary restriction zones that straddle several major road freight corridors used by Polish and German hauliers, including the A4 motorway and rail freight spurs into Moravia. All exporters must now secure pre-movement blood tests and health certificates before cattle, sheep or goats can leave the zone for domestic slaughterhouses or cross-border delivery.

For logistics managers the immediate headache is paperwork. GIW offices in Opole, Wrocław and Katowice are reporting a three-day backlog in issuing export permits, and heavy-goods vehicles are being diverted to sanitary inspection points staffed jointly by customs officers and veterinarians. Large agribusinesses such as Animex and Danish Crown are re-routing some shipments through northern seaports to avoid road delays.

Corporate relocation teams moving expatriate staff who travel with pets should note that canine import authorities in Germany and Denmark have already advised carriers to ensure dogs and cats are up to date on tick protection when originating in southern Poland. Although pet movement is still allowed, additional documentary checks are possible.

The ministry of agriculture believes the outbreak is contained, but warns that climate-driven expansion of midge populations could make such incidents more frequent, increasing regulatory friction for companies operating cold-chain and live-animal logistics across Central Europe.
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