China expects its U.S. agricultural imports to fall sharply

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: August 10, 2018

,

China will be looking to other markets to fill its annual shortfall of 90 million tonnes of soybeans, a third of which the U.S. had traditionally supplied.  Photo: Thinkstock

Beijing | Reuters – China’s imports of U.S. agricultural products will fall sharply once Beijing implements retaliatory trade measures and the country is able to cover its demand for cooking oil and animal feed, vice agriculture minister Han Jun said on Friday.

The trade dispute will have a limited impact on China’s agriculture sector, but hit its U.S. counterparts harder, Han Jun was quoted by state radio as saying.

“Relevant departments are fully prepared after meticulous studies and China is fully capable of ensuring domestic demand for cooking oil and protein-based animal feed be covered.”

Read Also

Farm manager Gao Qinshan feeds black pigs in a pen at a pig farm in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 15, 2026. REUTERS/Go Nakamura

Disgruntled with Western pork, China wants to go back to black pigs

Demand for black pigs, what has been marketed as the “Wagyu of pork,” known for its fattier and more tender texture, is in turn a lifeline for China’s beleaguered pork producers.

One solution is to boost imports from other exporters such as Brazil, and soymeal could easily be substituted by animal feeds made from other seeds, Han added.

China, the world’s top agricultural products importer, has an annual shortfall of 90 million tonnes of soybeans and the U.S. supplies a third of China’s total imports.

Soybeans are processed to make cooking oil and animal feed.

Beijing started levying an additional 25 percent tariff on U.S. beans on July 6 in retaliation for a similar move by Washington in the tit-for-tat trade war.

explore

Stories from our other publications