British Columbia phasing out mink farms because of COVID-19 spread
VICTORIA — The threat that mink farms in British Columbia would become a “reservoir” for COVID-19 infections is too great a health hazard, prompting the government to phase out of all the farms, the provincial health officer says.
Dr. Bonnie Henry and B.C. Agriculture Minister Lana Popham announced Friday a permanent ban on breeding mink. Live mink will also not be allowed on the province’s nine farms by April 2023. All operations must cease completely and have all their pelts sold by 2025.
Henry said an assessment by national and international experts showed the transmission of COVID-19 back and forth between humans and mink would continue.
While the highly transmissible Delta variant hasn’t been found on mink farms, the threat remains for a virus to mutate in mink, then be passed back to humans. Henry said a mutation could affect the effectiveness of vaccines.


