US meat industry puzzled by China’s import ban for one plant

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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – China’s decision to ban imports from a single Tyson Foods poultry plant where there was a coronavirus outbreak has raised concerns about the implications on the U.S. meat industry if the action is expanded to other plants.

Chinese customs officials didn’t hint about expanding the ban in a short statement it issued about suspending imports from the plant in Springdale, Arkansas. The country imposed a similar ban last week on pork imports from a German plant where a number of workers tested positive for COVID-19, but it hasn´t taken action against other U.S. beef, pork and poultry plants that have seen outbreaks among workers.

Jim Sumner, president of the USA Poultry & Egg Export Council, said he hopes the move won´t hurt the overall relationship with China, which had been improving after a new trade deal was signed early this year.

“Hopefully it´s not going to mean anything,” Sumner said. “If it remains at just one plant, it will not have any meaningful impact, but we don´t know what´s going to happen.”

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