Shanghai Daily

Imports of beef from 4 Australian firms halted

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CHINA has suspended beef imports from four major Australian meat processors, a foreign ministry spokespers­on confirmed yesterday.

Spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters that China’s customs agency “continuous­ly” found instances of the Australian companies having violated inspection and quarantine requiremen­ts and suspended the imports to “ensure the safety and health of Chinese consumers.”

“(China’s customs) notified the relevant Australian department­s and required them to investigat­e completely the reason for the problem and to fix it,” Zhao said yesterday.

He added that the suspension was unrelated to the bilateral dispute over COVID-19. Zhao also blasted Australia’s demand for a coronaviru­s inquiry as “erroneous words and deeds” and warned against “using the epidemic to engage in political manipulati­on.”

Labeling issues were also cited by Beijing when the same companies and two others lost their licences to ship beef to China in 2017 for several months.

Australian Trade Minister Simon Birmingham described the import suspension as “disappoint­ing,” but said the government was treating the trade issues as unrelated to discussion­s around a virus probe.

“We are concerned that the suspension­s appear to be based on highly technical issues, which in some cases date back more than a year,” he said. “We will work with industry and authoritie­s in both Australia and China to seek to find a solution that allows these businesses to resume their normal operations as soon as possible.”

Birmingham said Kilcoy Pastoral Company, JBS’s Beef City and Dinmore plants, and the Northern Cooperativ­e Meat Company have been banned from exporting beef to China due to issues with labeling and health certificat­es.

“Thousands of jobs relate to these meat processing facilities. Many more farmers rely upon them in terms of selling cattle into those facilities,” Birmingham told reporters in Canberra.

Australian Meat Industry Council Chief Executive Patrick Hutchinson said the companies made up approximat­ely 20 percent of Australian beef exports to China.

Australian meat exporters were aware of Chinese labeling requiremen­ts, Hutchinson said.

Worth more than A$3 billion (US$1.94 billion), Chinese demand for Australian beef surged in 2019, fueled by a growing middle class and as consumers switched to eating beef as pork availabili­ty fell during a swine fever outbreak which decimated Chinese hog herds.

JBS said in a statement it was working with Australian officials “to understand the technical issues that China has raised” and would take corrective action.

(Agencies)

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