Agoa: First US chicken imports hit SA

Chicken on display for sale in a local supermarket. Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi

Chicken on display for sale in a local supermarket. Picture: Simphiwe Mbokazi

Published Mar 2, 2016

Share

Johannesburg – United States chicken imports hit South African supermarket shelves on Tuesday for the first time in 15-years, ending a protracted trade dispute and ensuring South Africa would continue to receive trade benefits under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa).

The US Trade Representative Michael Froman and US Senators who had been involved in the trade dispute announced in Washington on Wednesday that 12 containers carrying three metric tons of US chicken had arrived in South Africa over the weekend and had already been distributed.

US officials said the first chickens had reached shops Tuesday though they did not know yet exactly where.

Froman said the arrival of the chicken imports and the resolution of a last-minute glitch about US pork imports meant that South Africa had met all the benchmarks for the lifting of the provisional suspension of some of its Agoa benefits.

However, he did not announce the lifting of the suspension, saying that US President Barack Obama was assessing the situation. But Obama’s announcement appears to be a formality, expected probably by Thursday.

Obama had announced on November 5 last year that the duty-free entry into the US of South African citrus and wine products under Agoa would end if South Africa’s health restrictions on the import of US poultry, beef and pork were not lifted by January 4.

Shortly after that he announced the deadline had been extended to March 15 to allow for the logistics of actually getting the meat into South African shops.

Froman and Senators Chris Coons of Delaware and Johnny Isakson of Georgia made the announcements at a telephone press conference on Wednesday.

Froman said that the lifting of the barriers to US poultry, beef and pork exports to South Africa would probably increase the sales of those products by about US$160 million a year.

Mike Brown, President of the US National Chicken Council said close to $100 million of that would be chicken exports.

The four men hailed this as “a great day for US farmers”, while Froman said the deal would also enable South African consumers to buy and enjoy quality products at good prices.

African News Agency

* Use IOL’s Facebook and Twitter pages to comment on our stories. See links below.

Related Topics: