US sees progress with China on farm trade barriers - USMEF

Pork and beef exporters welcome tariff and port fee relief

calendar icon 11 November 2025
clock icon 1 minute read

On November 1, the White House provided more details on the measures agreed to in last week’s meeting between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, including progress on agricultural trade barriers imposed by China and suspension of port service fees that raise costs for US exporters.

In a statement to the press, US Meat Export Federation (USMEF) president and CEO Dan Halstrom said the following:

"USMEF is encouraged by the progress being made in trade negotiations with China, and we appreciate the Trump administration’s emphasis on restoring market access for US agricultural exports," he said. "If China follows through on its commitment to suspend all retaliatory tariffs announced since March 4, and to suspend or remove all retaliatory non-tariff countermeasures taken since that date, this puts US pork in a much more competitive position in the Chinese market." 

"If the removal of non-tariff barriers means that China will promptly renew the US beef plant and cold storage registrations that it has allowed to expire over the past nine months, this will restore access to a critical beef export market," Halstrom added. "China’s recent delisting of some US beef plants for technical violations is also a retaliatory measure that must be addressed. We are anxious to see further progress on these issues."

"USMEF also appreciates the one-year pause in port service fees and China’s countermeasures imposed on US vessels," he concluded. "While USMEF is supportive of the Trump administration’s efforts to revitalise America’s maritime industry, we encourage an approach that stimulates investment and avoids increasing costs for US exporters and cargo owners."    

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