Europe Bans Brazilian Beef. Brazil Calls It Protectionism

Brazilian cattle The European Union will freeze all imports of Brazilian beef as from Thursday after Brazil failed to provide sufficient sanitary safety guarantees announced in Brussels EU Health and Consumer Affairs Commissioner Markos Kyprianou.

Last month EU warned Brazil, the world's biggest beef exporter, that only beef from an authorized and certified list of Brazilian farms would be allowed into the EU as from the end of January.

Since such a list could not be agreed on, "at this stage as we speak, there will be no holdings authorized to export to the European Union," underlined Commissioner Kyprianou.

"This move must be seen as a wake-up call for the Brazilian government, which has failed to respond to concerns of the European Union" said MEP Neil Parish, chairman of the European Parliament's agriculture committee.

EU decided on the measures following inspections last November which found Brazil's animal health and traceability systems failed to meet EU requirements on farm registration, animal identification and movement controls.

After the initial EU warning, the Brazilian authorities came up with a list of 2.600 farms they said deserved to be exempt from the export ban. Such a massive list was unacceptable for European authorities and hence the blanket ban on Brazilian beef.

However Kyprianou said it was possible to compile a list of authorized Brazilian beef suppliers but warned it would be a lengthy process.

"The timeframe depends on the number and on the complexities and the problems that we may suspect in each holding," he underlined.

Last month Brazil slammed as "unjustified" the original EU decision to put restrictions on its beef imports. Brazil argued there was no risk to humans or animals with Brazilian beef and blamed the EU decision on tougher European regulations imposed in the wake of Britain's "mad cow" epidemics.

The beef controversy, which is particularly strong in Britain and Ireland, is rooted in disputes over traceability of origin and control of livestock movements. EU insists cattle must remain on approved locations for at least 40 days before being sent to the abattoir.

The Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) welcomed the decision. IFA President Padraig Walshe said it was the result of a determined two-year campaign highlighting Brazil's failure to meet EU standards.

"Brazil had failed on foot and mouth disease controls, movement and traceability, border controls and animal health and food safety issues" he claimed. "Kyprianou had no option but to apply a full ban as Brazil had failed to comply with EU requirements".

Three Brazilian states which suffered foot-and-mouth outbreaks are already subject to a beef ban by the EU. Brazil has become the world's biggest beef exporter shipping 2.3 million tons annually equivalent to 4.2 billion US dollars. In 2006 a record year for Brazilian sales to the EU, beef exports totaled 698.000 tons.

"This is merely an expression of protectionism; it has nothing to do with sanitary issues. It's just to help Irish breeders increase the price of cattle and beef", said Marcus Vinicius Pratini de Moraes, president of the Association of Brazilian Beef Exporters.

Brazil's two main meat packers JBS and Marfrig, which have become global corporations, said they would have to reroute shipments to the EU from other countries where they have strong interests and direct access to EU such as Argentina, Uruguay, Australia and United States.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Petrobras Finds Oil Again. This Time, Light and Plentiful

Brazilian state-controlled gas and oil multinational Petrobras announced late last week a new oil ...

Brazil to the Rescue of Meatpacking Sector with US$ 5 Billion

Brazil will offer a ten billion reais credit line from BNDES, the National Development ...

Brazil’s Credit Volume Reaches 36.5% of GDP, Best in 13 Years

The volume of credit in the Brazilian National Financial System totaled 1.067 trillion reais ...

Brazil Thickens the Ranks of Its Middle Class by 40 Million in Less than a Decade

39.5 million Brazilians became part of the middle class between 2003 and May 2011, ...

After a 10-Year Silence, a Brazilian Chancellor Goes to Israel

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, is in Israel. This is the ...

A Rare Case of Brazilian Rock Success

In 1997, producer Rick Bonadio, who has worked with many of Brazil’s biggest acts, ...

Brazil’s Drop in Demand Causes 25% Fall in Bolivian Gas Production

Brazil has reduced its demand for Bolivian natural gas to 24 million cubic meters ...

Murder of US Nun Deeply Shakes Brazil

Dorothy Stang, 76, a Catholic missionary from the US has been murdered Saturday by ...

Brazilian Astronaut Will Wear Clothes Made in Brazil in Space

The garments that Brazilian astronaut Marcos César Pontes is going to wear during his ...

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

By Brazzil Magazine Relax…It’s Sex—Music comedy. Written, directed and composed by Wolf Maya, with ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`