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https://scmp.com/business/global-economy/article/2103518/china-allows-imports-us-rice-first-time-ever
Business

China allows imports of US rice for first time ever

Photo taken on April 10, 2017 shows the scenery of Hani terraced fields in Yuanyang County, southwest China's Yunnan Province. China has agreed to import rice from the US for the first time ever. Photo: Xinhua

China officials have agreed to allow imports of US rice for the first time ever, US Department of Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Thursday.

The move would give US farmers access to the world’s biggest rice consumer, with China importing about 5 million tonnes last year, Perdue said in a statement.

China opened its rice market when it joined the World Trade Organisation in 2001 but a lack of phytosanitary protocols between China and the United States effectively banned imports, according to trade group USA Rice.

“We waited a decade for the protocol to be signed and our members are anxious to meet the demand of China’s consumers for safe, high-quality US rice,” USA Rice President Betsy Ward said in a statement, adding that China consumes the equivalent of the entire US rice crop every 13 days.

The USDA last month estimated US milled rice production this year at 6.07 million tonnes, down from 7.12 million tonnes last year.

The announcement was another sign of strengthening relations on agriculture trade between the United States and China under US President Donald Trump, despite disagreements in other areas such as steel.

China last month resumed imports of US beef for the first time since 2003. Last week, Chinese buyers inked deals valued at about US$5 billion during a ceremony in Iowa to buy 12.53 million tonnes of US soybeans and 371 tonnes of beef and pork.

Villagers plant rice in a field in Lianyungang, in China's eastern Jiangsu province on June 4, 2017. Photo: AFP
Villagers plant rice in a field in Lianyungang, in China's eastern Jiangsu province on June 4, 2017. Photo: AFP

US rice futures rose about 14 cents to a one-year high at US$12.00 per cwt after the news.

China intends to send inspectors to visit US rice mills and facilities to ensure shipments would not introduce pests into China, said Carl Brothers, chairman of the USA Rice International Trade Policy Committee.

Stuart Hoetger, a rice trader at California’s Calrose Co-op, said he hoped to sell rice to China as soon as retailers there were approved to take in imports. The cooperative of California rice farmers already has customers in the Middle East and elsewhere in Asia.

“I don’t think it will explode overnight but I think it could turn into significant demand,” Hoetger said.