Agriculture Appropriations Conferees Drop Ban on Poultry Products From China

Agriculture Appropriations Conferees Drop Ban on Poultry Products From China Conferees on the agriculture appropriations bill –– led by House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Rosa DeLauro (D Conn.) –– have agreed on language in the FY 2010 agriculture appropriations

Conferees on the agriculture appropriations bill –– led by House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) –– have agreed on language in the FY 2010 agriculture appropriations conference report with respect to potential imports of poultry products from China. 

 

The change allows USDA to use appropriated funds in FY 2010 to develop a a rule allowing imports of processed poultry or poultry products from China only after the secretary of Agriculture notifies Congress that certain conditions have been met. 

 

According to a USDA statement, the department worked with DeLauro to craft the final language, which "ensures the protection of the nation's food supply in a manner consistent with scientific principles as required under U.S. international obligations."

 

Under U.S. law, poultry and poultry products may not be imported from any foreign country unless USDA determines that the food safety standards, facilities, and conditions of that country achieve a level of sanitary protection equivalent to that achieved by U.S. standards. If USDA determines that a country achieves this level of protection for some or all poultry products, it issues a rule permitting import of such products, subject to border inspection and other requirements.

 

China is the No 1 market for U.S. poultry exports and No 2 for pork with purchases of $690 million. Livestock groups said the agreement on poultry showed the United States would play by the rules and that China should too.

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