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South Africa lifts ban on poultry imports from US; Isakson applauds move

By AccessWDUN staff
Posted 12:35PM on Friday 8th January 2016 ( 9 years ago )

South Africa has lifted longstanding barriers to U.S. poultry imports, enabling U.S. poultry to be imported into South Africa for the first time in 15 years.

U.S. Senators Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., and Chris Coons, D-Del., co-chairs of the Senate Chicken Caucus who represent two of the country's major poultry producing states, applauded Friday's announcement by the Obama administration and the U.S. poultry industry.

The announcement came as a result of a June 2015 agreement that was reached in the long-running poultry dispute between the United States and South Africa. Imports into the South African market could begin within a month, according to Isakson's office.

“South Africa’s decision to finally fulfill the obligations of the settlement reached last summer means that after more than 15 years of illegal anti-dumping duties and unfair trade policies, American poultry will finally be able to enter the South African market,” said Isakson and Coons in a joint statement. “The success of this deal is the result of years of discussions led by our poultry sector and U.S. trade officials, and we are proud to have also played our part. South Africa is a critical market for the U.S. poultry industry, and will lead to tens of millions of dollars more in annual export sales. It is also a good deal for South Africa, as our poultry is healthy, affordable, and of the highest quality, and we are thrilled that it will finally reach the dinner tables of South Africans. The U.S. poultry industry is committed to investing in the South African poultry sector, and this deal will help build a strong partnership between our industries.”

Senators Isakson and Coons have been pressuring the South African government for more than a year to end the anti-dumping duties and unfair food safety and health trade policies on U.S. poultry. The senators met on numerous occasions with South African President Jacob Zuma and other South African officials to discuss this issue over the last several years.

Isakson also secured language in last year’s African Growth and Opportunity Act, or AGOA for short, reauthorization requiring an out-of-cycle review of South Africa's benefits due to the persistence of these issues. The bipartisan amendment was introduced in the Senate Finance Committee by Isakson and co-sponsored by Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., and Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

On June 8, 2015, a settlement was reached between the United States and South Africa after negotiations in Paris led by the United States Trade Representative, the Department of State, U.S. Ambassador to South Africa Patrick Gaspard and trade experts from industry. The agreement to drop anti-dumping duties and establish a quota was welcome news for the entire U.S. poultry industry, including the large poultry operations in the Senators’ home states – Georgia and Delaware.

Since the settlement was reached, South Africa has been slow to fulfill the obligations agreed to in Paris, including the commitment to resolve sanitary barriers to poultry hindering the successful implementation of the agreement.

In September 2015, Senators Coons and Isakson called on President Zuma to act quickly to address the unresolved issues in the agreement, and in November, President Obama issued a 60-day notice of his intent to suspend AGOA benefits for South Africa’s agricultural products if South Africa continued to fail to eliminate trade barriers to U.S. poultry, beef, and pork. That notice expired on January 4, 2016.

Sen. Isakson (File photo)

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