|
AGRICULTURE REPORT - May 7, 2002: Russia Lifts Ban
on American Chickens
By George Grow
This is the VOA Special English AGRICULTURE
REPORT.
American agriculture is recovering from a Russian
ban on chicken imports from the United States. The Russian government
ended its month-long ban on American chicken and other poultry products
last month. Yet the effects of the trade ban continue to affect American
farmers and the American meat industry.
In recent weeks, prices for chicken and other
poultry products dropped because of fewer exports. Many Americans bought
more chicken, but spent less on beef and pork products. Because of this,
beef and pork prices dropped, too. That is good news for most people,
but bad news for farmers.
Russia is the largest market for American poultry
exports. Last year, American producers earned more than six-hundred-million
dollars from poultry exports to Russia.
Russian officials announced the import ban in
early March. They said American poultry processing centers were not
clean. They also objected to the poultry being fed antibiotic drugs
and other chemicals.
American officials denied the poultry producers
were in violation of Russian health rules. Some trade experts suspect
the ban had little to do with chicken or poultry products. They said
Russian officials were angry about a decision by President Bush to order
high taxes on steel imports entering the United States. Steel is a major
Russian export.
For weeks, American officials negotiated with
the Russian government to end the ban on poultry imports. Mister Bush
even called Russian leader Vladimir Putin to urge an end to the dispute.
In late March, the two sides signed an agreement. Russia agreed to end
the ban on imports from all but four American states. Russian inspectors
reportedly found diseased chickens from those states.
As part of the agreement, American agricultural
officials now require poultry producers to have a new health permit.
They also require new methods to test chickens for salmonella bacteria.
Salmonella has been linked to food poisoning.
The day after the ban ended, Russia's Agriculture
Ministry announced that Russian companies must have a new permit if
they plan to import American poultry. American officials warned that
this requirement could delay the recovery of American poultry sales.
This VOA Special English AGRICULTURE REPORT
was written by George Grow.
万千英语族关于VOA Special English听力材料的特别说明:
- 本站收集整理、转载VOA Special English之音频及文本仅出于方便英语爱好者学习英语,练习听力之目的,不代表本站赞同VOA之任何观点。
- 新闻一般都有其倾向性,VOA做为境外站点,其新闻报导的倾向性必然带有其自身的目的,本站作为公益性英语学习站点,在收集资料时力求不损害国家和民族之利益,对于明显与主流媒体观点不一致的资料已经进行了删减,但是由于我们自身的局限性,可能对于个别篇章把握尺度不够严格,若您在使用这些听力资料时发现个别材料不合适,请与我们联系处理。更多信息,请点击关于我们链接获得。
- 本站VOA Special English音频资料为rm格式,需要安装RealPlayer 或 RealOne方可使用,关于RealPlayer下载、安装使用等问题,请访问其官方站点http://www.real.com/products/player。若您需要mp3格式文件,请下载RM格式文件后自行转换。
|
|