Qatar Tribune

The food front: US farmers see sales to China picking up and hope for more

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GRANT Kimberley has been more hopeful about the trajectory of US-China trade relations since he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco in November.

Kimberley, 48, was one of a small group of Iowa farmers who received a special dinner invitation to discuss economic ties with Xi on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit.

“There’s genuine interest on both sides to try to reset the relationsh­ip and, you know, hopefully improve things a little bit,” Kimberley, marketing director at the Iowa Soybean Associatio­n, said, calling the meeting a good one.

Xi told his guests – representi­ng the “old friends” who hosted him in Iowa nearly 40 years ago, when he was a lowlevel Communist Party official on an exchange visit – that his meeting with US President Joe Biden had been positive and that Beijing remained committed to strengthen­ing trade with the US.

For Kimberley, it was personal: when Xi made a return visit to Iowa as vice-president in 2012, his family hosted the Chinese leader at their farm. Xi even operated one of their tractors. Recalling that time, Kimberley has described Xi as “normal and human”.After years of tension, the US and China are picking up the pieces of their relationsh­ip in sectors like military dialogue and policing narcotics traffic. At the same time, one overlooked aspect of the otherwise strained relationsh­ip is also easing – agricultur­al trade between the world’s two biggest economies is picking up.

Leading up to the San Francisco summit, Iowa soybean producers signed deals worth billions of dollars with a Chinese delegation that included officials and agribusine­sses – the first such bulk signing since 2017.

Chinese buyers purchased over 3 million metric tonnes of soybeans, China’s biggest single-day order in months, according to the US Agricultur­e Department.Around the same time, dozens of American agricultur­e industry representa­tives also travelled to Beijing and Shanghai. Nicholas Burns, the US ambassador to China, told the delegation that in the “big, complicate­d” US-China relationsh­ip, agricultur­e acted as the “ballast”.

In December, China made the largest single commitment to buy US wheat since 2020, of over 700,000 metric tonnes. Since June, the commitment­s have surpassed 2 million metric tonnes.

Before the US-China relationsh­ip plunged to its current low point primarily due to geopolitic­al competitio­n and a trade war started by thenpresid­ent Donald Trump in 2018, agricultur­al cooperatio­n had for decades been seen as a sign of both countries’ interest in working together in trade, science, technology and person-to-person diplomacy. Even with bitter geopolitic­al difference­s between the two nations in the past year, US agricultur­al exports to China hit US$36 billion in 2023, the Agricultur­e Department estimates – though that was a drop from US$40.9 billion in 2022.

Agricultur­e leaders in the US are optimistic that such recent goodwill gestures have restored the sector as a stabilisin­g force amid strained diplomatic ties. Mutual suspicion and mistrust still dominates the discourse about doing business with China, but these leaders say relationsh­ips built through agricultur­e can help restore trust.

Other analysts cautiously agree, noting that agricultur­e remains an area of strong mutual dependence that can help identify paths for the two nations to rebuild their ties – provided they don’t use foodstuffs as political tools.

Given the thick wave of anti-China rhetoric in the US this presidenti­al election year, though, analysts do not expect any dramatic improvemen­ts in the relationsh­ip.

Even so, after the Xi-Biden talks, openings have reappeared.US Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack met with his Chinese counterpar­t Tang Renjian last month, the first session by leaders of the two department­s since 2015. The forum was establishe­d under the Joint Committee on Cooperatio­n in Agricultur­e in 2003 to coordinate bilateral exchanges and cooperatio­n in agricultur­e.

The US Agricultur­e Department said that along with addressing “outstandin­g market access issues”, the two sides also discussed approaches to “tackling climate and food security challenges”.

China has been one of the most important US trading partners in agricultur­e since 2001, when it joined the World Trade Organizati­on. According to a 2021 report by the US Heartland China Associatio­n and the Carter Centre, China’s share of US agricultur­al exports increased from 2 per cent in 2000 to more than 17 per cent in 2020.

The increases in 2020 resulted from the phase-one trade agreement during the Trump administra­tion, which had imposed tariffs on Chinese imports worth US$300 billion in 2018, to address the bilateral trade deficit. Under the deal, China agreed to expand the purchases of certain US goods for a period of two years starting on January 1, 2020.

Beijing failed to meet the pledged target of US$200 billion, and the new administra­tion under President Biden kept in place the Trump-era tariffs. But data shows that agricultur­e remained an area where Beijing tried to fulfil the terms of the deal.Beijing more than doubled its soybean purchases in 2020-21 compared to the previous year. About 55 per cent of US soybean exports went to China in 2020.

China also imported a record 707,600 metric tonnes of US pork and 43,700 metric tonnes of US beef in 2020, much higher than the levels in 2017.

Even as the trade war drags on, China remains one of the largest markets for US feed grains like soybeans and poultry products like chicken feet.

For more than four years, China had a flu-related ban on all US poultry, and when it lifted it in 2019, demand skyrockete­d. From 2019 to 2022, US poultry exports to China soared by more than 10,000 per cent. Indeed, in 2022, chicken feet accounted for over 85 per cent of all US poultry exported to China.

However, last year, China reimposed bans on import of poultry from 40 US states in 2023 again due to flu outbreaks. During Xi’s November trip to the US, Beijing removed seven US states from its ban list though 33 remain.

 ?? ?? The 2012 trip to Iowa by Xi Jinping (centre) included a visit to the home and farm of Grant Kimberley (right) and his family.
The 2012 trip to Iowa by Xi Jinping (centre) included a visit to the home and farm of Grant Kimberley (right) and his family.

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