Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack and the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
announced the opening of export markets to Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia for
U.S. day-old chicks and hatching eggs,
increasing U.S. exports by an estimated $25 million a year.
"This is a
significant agreement for poultry exporters in the United States," said USDA
Secretary Tom Vilsack. "For nearly 10 years, the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service has pursued the opening of the Russian market to U.S. day-old
chicks and hatching eggs, and now we have also secured access
for these products to Belarus and Kazakhstan."
In February, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
veterinary health personnel and their counterparts in Moscow developed the
export documentation that Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will issue
for products shipped to the three countries. In 2010, Russia, Kazakhstan and
Belarus formed a Customs Union, and are currently working to harmonize import
requirements for cattle and other live animals and livestock products. The
market access for poultry commodities represents the first of nearly 40 new
agreements related to live animals and animal products that USDA will work to
negotiate with the Customs Union.
Vilsack made the announcement on April 3. The secretary also
announced the opening of dairy cattle trade to Iraq, and the arrival of the
first shipment of U.S. Anjou pears to China. This is the first time U.S. pairs
have been available to consumers in China.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service's team of technical
experts, based in the United States and abroad, includes scientists,
veterinarians, pathologists, and entomologists that advocate on behalf of U.S.
agriculture. They build relationships with their agricultural health and
regulatory counterparts in other countries and use scientific principles to
explain to foreign officials why U.S. commodities are safe to import. The
agency's efforts include keeping U.S. agricultural industries free from pests
and diseases and certifying that the millions of U.S. agricultural and food
products shipped to markets abroad meet the importing countries' entry
requirements.
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