China approves imports of live poultry from U.S.
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[February 17, 2020] By
Dominique Patton
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has approved the
import of all poultry products from the United States, the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Affairs said on its website on Monday, including
breeding birds in addition to poultry meat approved late last year.
Beijing had banned all trade in poultry products from the United States
since 2015 due to outbreaks of avian influenza there.
But it lifted the ban on poultry meat imports in November 2019 as a
concession to the United States ahead of finalizing a limited trade
deal.
The new announcement would also allow for the import of live birds, said
Li Jinghui of the China Poultry Association, benefiting companies
including Aviagen [EWESJA.UL] and Cobb-Vantress Inc, both based in the
United States and among the world's biggest poultry breeding companies.
Nobody at the China offices of Aviagen or Cobb could immediately be
reached by phone.
Imports of live poultry from the U.S. were worth $38.7 million in 2013,
dwarfed by other poultry products such as chicken feet.
However, the U.S. ban had a significant impact on China's poultry
producers, who needed the breeders to replenish their stock.
(GRAPHIC: China approves imports of all U.S. poultry, poultry products -
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Opening up imports of live birds again is part of the trade deal, said
Li, although he added that it may not have a major impact.
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Chickens feed from a row of feed bins at C&A Farms in Fairmont,
North Carolina June 10, 2014. REUTERS/Randall Hill/File Photo
Both Aviagen and Cobb have increased production of their birds, known as
'grandparent stock', in other locations such as New Zealand to meet
demand from China.
Two of China's leading poultry firms, Shandong Yisheng Livestock and
Poultry Breeding Co Ltd <002458.SZ> and Fujian Sunner Development Co
Ltd. <002299.SZ>, have also begun their own breeding programs to reduce
their reliance on imports.
China is the world's second-largest poultry producer and has been
ramping up output to fill a huge meat shortage after a disease epidemic
decimated its pig herd.
But prices have plunged in recent weeks because of measures taken by
Beijing to tackle a coronavirus outbreak that has killed more than 1,700
people.
Restrictions on moving livestock and extended holidays in many areas
have paralyzed the supply chain, leaving farmers stuck with large
inventories of birds and eggs and slashing demand as restaurants and
canteens stay shut.
Containers of frozen chicken feet from the U.S. have also been caught up
in the logistics logjam, with many diverted away from China because of a
lack of capacity to store additional cargoes.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; Editing by Kim Coghill and Christian
Schmollinger)
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