Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China targeting Tyson plant

Its imports halted, threat seen to other meat producers.

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

China suspended poultry imports from a Tyson Foods Inc. plant where hundreds of employees tested positive for covid-19, stoking concerns over the broader implicatio­ns for U.S. and global meat exports.

All products from the plant in Springdale, where Tyson is based, that are about to arrive in China or have arrived at the country’s ports will be seized, customs officials announced Sunday.

The suspension is an about face from just a few days ago, when Chinese officials said food was unlikely to be responsibl­e for a fresh virus outbreak in Beijing.

Tyson said Friday that 13% of its workers tested positive for the virus at plants in Northwest Arkansas.

The move is a potential new threat to meat plants across the world that have seen slaughter disruption­s because of the virus. In the U.S., hundreds of workers have become ill, and dozens have died. There’s also been a recent uptick in infections at facilities in Brazil and Germany.

“There are worries in China over serious coronaviru­s outbreaks in the U.S.,” said Lin Guofa, a senior analyst at Bric Agricultur­e Group, a Beijing-based consulting firm. The public is worried about imported frozen products as almost all cases in Beijing have been connected to a meat and frozen fish wholesale market, he said.

China imports most of its poultry from Brazil, while the U.S. makes up just a small percentage of imports, Lin said.

A new outbreak in China had been blamed on imported salmon after the head of a food market where clusters were detected said the virus had been traced to a chopping board used by a fish seller.

If China continues to suspend shipments based on coronaviru­s cases reported at processing plants, it could

also threaten to undermine promised agricultur­al purchases as part of the Washington­Beijing trade deal.

Tyson said in a statement Sunday it was looking into the report and cited statements from the World Health Organizati­on and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that there’s no evidence virus transmissi­on is associated with food.

Tyson’s shares fell 2.85% Monday in New York.

China had backed off from its previous stance linking food to virus cases. A customs official at a briefing on Friday said the country was taking the advice of internatio­nal organizati­ons that there’s a low risk of imported food transmitti­ng the virus, and no food restrictio­ns would be imposed.

But the move to block the Tyson shipments runs counter to that, and reverts the country back to increasing its scrutiny over imported food.

"China's action is very troubling to me," Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Monday during his daily coronaviru­s update. "That decision on one plant in Springdale is not reasonable, in my judgement ... that's not good and not helpful at all in our relationsh­ip."

China’s customs department said over the weekend that one poultry company in Britain reported covid-19 cases. While the U.K. isn’t allowed to export poultry to the Asian nation, its authoritie­s have agreed to take measures to prevent the virus from contaminat­ing pork and beef exports to China, and will inform the Asian nation whenever exporters have any outbreaks.

China’s customs authoritie­s had started testing all shipments of imported meat for the virus, while officials in some major cities were also checking the products at domestic markets. In a statement last week, China Customs said all 32,174 samples of imported seafood, meat, vegetables, fruit and other related products had tested negative.

The country’s scrutiny may end up having a big impact on global food shipments. Its surging imports of meat had helped to buoy U.S. and Brazilian producers of poultry, pork and beef, both before the nation’s virus outbreak in January and as global trade has staged a nascent recovery in recent weeks with the country exiting lockdowns.

At the same time, China’s market is facing a chicken surplus from its own production and stagnating demand, Bric Agricultur­e’s Lin said.

Also Sunday, a southwest Missouri county that is home to a Tyson poultry processing plant announced it has doubled its number of new coronaviru­s cases.

McDonald County, which has about 23,000 residents, added 196 new cases Sunday, resulting in a cumulative total of 434 cases, according to McDonald County Public Health Administra­tor Paige Behm.

The county is home to two poultry processing facilities: one in Noel owned by Tyson Foods, and another in Southwest City, owned by Simmons Foods.

The new cases can be attributed to combined results of community testing and testing of Tyson workers, according to Behm. She would not comment on how many of the new cases were of Tyson workers.

“I can say we are seeing quite a few cases coming from the poultry industry and poultry workers,” Behm said.

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 ?? (AP) ?? Tyson Foods workers wear protective gear and stand between plastic dividers at the company’s Camilla, Ga., poultry processing plant in this April photo provided by the Springdale-based company.
(AP) Tyson Foods workers wear protective gear and stand between plastic dividers at the company’s Camilla, Ga., poultry processing plant in this April photo provided by the Springdale-based company.

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