USDA report on the EU poultry sector

In September 2003 the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service released its annual review of the EU poultry sector. According to this report the EU poultry market is now stable after recovery from the avian flu outbreak. Export refunds were introduced for turkey meat to all destinations except the USA and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52845
http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/December-2003
id ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/52845
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/52845 2023-07-30T04:02:28+02:00 USDA report on the EU poultry sector Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2015-01-09T14:08:21Z https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52845 http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/December-2003 en eng Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Agritrade CTA. 2003. USDA report on the EU poultry sector. Agritrade, December 2003. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52845 http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/December-2003 Open Access Agritrade News Item 2015 ftcgiar 2023-07-12T20:31:56Z In September 2003 the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service released its annual review of the EU poultry sector. According to this report the EU poultry market is now stable after recovery from the avian flu outbreak. Export refunds were introduced for turkey meat to all destinations except the USA and Estonia, but there were no changes to export refunds for other poultry meat. Changes in the market are expected in response to 'the January 2003 announcement by Russia of its tariff-rate quota, which is expected to limit imports of beef, pork and poultry' and in the longer term the implementation of the CAP mid-term review proposals and EU enlargement. Comment: The Russian decision to limit imports of beef, poultry and pork through a TRQ system could leave considerable volumes of EU poultry meat looking for new markets. The impact this could have on ACP poultry sectors, particularly in west and central Africa will be determined by the extent to which these markets can directly replace former Russian markets. Already in west Africa there are growing complaints over increased EU poultry exports, which have arisen on the back of EU cereals-sector reform (which has substantially reduced EU poultry production costs). The openness of many west African and central African markets to poultry meat exports from the EU may spell severe problems for local poultry producers in a context of reduced EU exports to Russia. In September 2003 the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. Article in Journal/Newspaper Avian flu CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
institution Open Polar
collection CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
op_collection_id ftcgiar
language English
description In September 2003 the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service released its annual review of the EU poultry sector. According to this report the EU poultry market is now stable after recovery from the avian flu outbreak. Export refunds were introduced for turkey meat to all destinations except the USA and Estonia, but there were no changes to export refunds for other poultry meat. Changes in the market are expected in response to 'the January 2003 announcement by Russia of its tariff-rate quota, which is expected to limit imports of beef, pork and poultry' and in the longer term the implementation of the CAP mid-term review proposals and EU enlargement. Comment: The Russian decision to limit imports of beef, poultry and pork through a TRQ system could leave considerable volumes of EU poultry meat looking for new markets. The impact this could have on ACP poultry sectors, particularly in west and central Africa will be determined by the extent to which these markets can directly replace former Russian markets. Already in west Africa there are growing complaints over increased EU poultry exports, which have arisen on the back of EU cereals-sector reform (which has substantially reduced EU poultry production costs). The openness of many west African and central African markets to poultry meat exports from the EU may spell severe problems for local poultry producers in a context of reduced EU exports to Russia. In September 2003 the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
USDA report on the EU poultry sector
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title USDA report on the EU poultry sector
title_short USDA report on the EU poultry sector
title_full USDA report on the EU poultry sector
title_fullStr USDA report on the EU poultry sector
title_full_unstemmed USDA report on the EU poultry sector
title_sort usda report on the eu poultry sector
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52845
http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/December-2003
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_source Agritrade
op_relation Agritrade
CTA. 2003. USDA report on the EU poultry sector. Agritrade, December 2003. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/52845
http://agritrade.cta.int/Back-issues/Agriculture-monthly-news-update/2003/December-2003
op_rights Open Access
_version_ 1772813285998985216