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在线翻译:
szdaily -> World Economy -> 
US scrambles to clear egg exports to South Korea
    2017-01-03  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    U.S. officials are urgently seeking an agreement with South Korea that would allow imports of American eggs so farmers can cash in on a shortage caused by the Asian country’s worst-ever outbreak of bird flu.

    The two sides are negotiating over terms of potential shipments after South Korea lifted a ban on imports of U.S. table eggs that it imposed when the United States grappled with its own bout of bird flu in 2015, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

    If an agreement is reached, U.S. shipments could bring some relief to South Koreans who have faced soaring egg prices and rationing since the outbreak there began in November. The egg shipments also would help U.S. farmers cope with an oversupply that is depressing prices.

    The opportunity to profit by filling South Korea’s shortfall with U.S. eggs has sent brokers and traders into overdrive.

    About 26 million birds, more than a quarter of South Korea’s poultry stock, have been culled to control the outbreak, and most of the birds have been egg-laying hens.

    Strains of bird flu, which can be spread to poultry by wild birds, have been detected across Asia and in Europe in recent weeks.

    The United States could reach an agreement to open trade with South Korea as early as this week, said Mark Perigen, national supervisor for shell eggs for a division of the USDA.

    “Everybody’s working hard to get it done,” Perigen said Friday, adding that USDA employees had worked during holiday vacations on the issue.

    “They’re desperate for eggs over there, and the government realizes that,” Perigen said.

    Glenn Hickman, chief executive of Hickman’s Eggs in Arizona, has received calls from brokers searching for U.S. eggs to ship to South Korea.

    “Everybody in South Korea who needs eggs has Googled everybody in the world who might have eggs,” Hickman said.

    “We’re getting calls from brokers who have no idea even the right questions to ask us,” he added. “It’s just somebody who knows how to freight stuff from the United States to South Korea.”

    With no agreement yet between the two countries, Hickman is asking employees to take contact information for the potential customers.

    The United States Egg Marketers, a cooperative of farmers that was established to export eggs, has received “numerous inquiries about this already, including from people who have never exported anything in their lives,” said Eka Inall, the group’s president.

    “Our phone is blowing up, our email is blowing up,” she said.

    In 2015, U.S. food companies imported eggs from Europe after bird flu ravaged domestic chicken flocks and sent egg prices to record highs.

    Since then, U.S. prices have tumbled as farmers have ramped up production.

    The United States produced 7.44 billion table eggs in November, up 11.5 percent from a year earlier, and there were 312 million hens laying table eggs Dec. 1, up 8 percent from a year before, according to the USDA.

    On Dec. 26, the average price for a dozen large white U.S. eggs was US$1.17, down from a high of US$2.88 in August 2015, according to market data firm Urner Barry.

    “Current conditions in the United States are definitely a motivating factor to get this thing done,” Brian Moscogiuri, an Urner Barry egg analyst, said about U.S. efforts to start shipments to South Korea.

    If South Korea begins importing U.S. eggs, its residents may need to adjust to a different appearance of the food staple.

    Jim Sumner, president of the U.S. Poultry and Egg Export Council, said many South Koreans prefer brown colored eggs, while the United States mostly produces white eggs. “As they say, beggars can’t be choosers,” he said. (SD-Agencies)

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