US President Barack Obama is set to announce as early as Monday that
he is suspending duty-free treatment of South African agricultural
products under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa).
Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies. |
SA
exports at risk, which include citrus, macadamia nuts and wine, were
valued in the first 10 months of last year at more than R2bn, according
to US trade data.
Mr Obama’s expected move reflects deep
frustration with what the White House and members of Congress, including
long-time allies, see as Pretoria’s failure to meet mutually agreed
benchmarks for lifting bans on US poultry and beef, nominally imposed to
protect the health of SA consumers and livestock.
Agoa, first
adopted in 2000, grants African countries privileged access to the US
market on certain conditions, including that they make "continual
progress" towards eliminating barriers to US trade and investment.
On
November 5 last year Mr Obama told Congress he had determined SA was
not making sufficient progress and that unless Pretoria could prove
otherwise within 60 days he intended to reimpose tariffs on SA farm exports that had been exempted under Agoa.
When
the deadline expired at midnight on December 31, "outstanding issues"
had not been resolved, Trevor Kincaid, spokesman for the office of the
US Trade Representative, said.
Talks had continued late into New Year’s Eve.
On
Sunday Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies was reluctant to say
anything about SA having missed the December 31 deadline imposed by Mr
Obama ahead of a media conference today with Agriculture Minister
Senzeni Zokwana and Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi.
He conceded,
however, that the progress in the negotiations had been too slow.
Questioned as to whether he was concerned about the failure to conclude
an accord with the US, Mr Davies said "yes and no", adding that he would
clarify his views today.
From the US perspective, the major unmet benchmark was US chicken on South African shelves by the end of last year.
SA
did agree to rebate prohibitive antidumping duties on a 65,000 tonne
annual quota for US chicken portions and to admit US poultry sourced
from regions deemed free of avian influenza. However, Pretoria is now
demanding that US chicken imports be certified free of salmonella, a
common bacteria destroyed by cooking.
The US says it exports
chicken to 160 other countries without meeting this standard and that
the standard itself is not "science-based" as required under World Trade
Organisation rules. As one official put it: "Nobody eats chicken
sushi."
Also unresolved is SA’s ban on US beef, originally imposed
to prevent the spread of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) — mad
cow disease. Cabinet lifted the ban in August, decreeing the risk was
negligible, but a new sticking point has emerged.
US herds contain
cattle imported from Canada and Mexico, which SA has yet to declare
negligible risks for BSE. SA wants assurances that meat from these
animals will not be included in imports from the US. The US says this is
not possible.
US imports of SA citrus between January and October
last year were valued at $60.2m, up from $51.9m over the same period in
2014. Growers have told US agriculture officials they fear they will
not be able to compete with exports from Peru, Uruguay and Chile, should
Agoa preferences be suspended.
Once announced, the suspension
would go into immediate effect and would affect all relevant goods not
yet landed in the US, including those in transit.
Early last month
Mr Davies signed off on a report by the International Trade
Administration Commission. The commission fast-tracked the process of
considering public submissions on its proposed regulations for the
rebate on the imported chicken quota.
With Linda Ensor
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