Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Tyson, Simmons set to ship Cuba chicken

Tyson, Simmons set to ship Cuba chicken
Governor: 4,500 tons due next month
By Claire Williams
This article was published December 19, 2015 at 2:48 a.m.

Tyson Foods and Simmons Foods will resume trade with Cuba after an
outbreak of bird flu earlier this year caused the country to ban poultry
from Arkansas.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson said the Cuban government has ordered 4,500 tons of
poultry from Arkansas companies to be shipped in January. Hutchinson led
a three-day trade mission to Havana in September.

"Because of our trip we got this success story of the poultry contract,"
Hutchinson said. "It's an 11 million-person market there that we have
not accessed before, and they love poultry."

Countries that have banned U.S. poultry, including Cuba, drove down
profits in the poultry industry this year.

U.S. poultry and egg exports for the first half of 2015 fell by 14
percent, down $386.3 million to $2.4 billion from the same period last
year, according to data compiled by the Foreign Agricultural Services.

That's the largest drop in export value for the first half of year,
according to a report by the U.S. Poultry and Egg Council.

Most bans on U.S. and Arkansas poultry have been lifted since the
outbreak earlier this year. Jim Sumner, president of the Poultry and Egg
Export Council, said the most costly ban that remains is China's, which
bars poultry from anywhere in the country.

For Arkansas, the biggest remaining challenge is Mexico.

Mexico, the top importer of U.S. chicken and turkey, has banned poultry
from states that were affected by the outbreak, including Arkansas.

Sumner said Mexican delegates are planning a trip to Arkansas and
California in January to see how the states responded to and are
preparing for another bird flu outbreak.

"We are hopeful that after that visit they will lift the ban on
Arkansas, as well," he said.

He said the broiler industry has been suffering the consequences brought
about by other related commodities.

"The restrictions that have affected the broiler industry are the result
of problems that occurred in the turkey and egg industry," he said.

In Arkansas, the only case of bird flu was from a commercial turkey farm
in Boone County, but export bans usually include broilers and all other
poultry.

With confidence in U.S. poultry shaky after bird flu, the industry is
targeting areas that are poised for growth. Sumner said he and other
industry leaders are in the process of getting South Africa and South
Korea to lift their export bans.

"We expect Cuba to be a market that's going to continue to grow and
should be very important for the U.S. poultry industry," he said.

Poultry is the top U.S. export to Cuba. In 2014 U.S. chicken companies
sold Cuba $147.5 million worth of frozen chicken. Federal law requires
upfront cash payments for U.S. products shipped to Cuba and prohibits
sales based on credit.

A year ago President Barack Obama asked Congress to lift the embargo on
Cuban trade. Hutchinson has said that this would help Arkansas poultry
sales in the cash-strapped country.

"Just imagine what we could do if they lifted the credit terms,"
Hutchinson said. "It's a matter of supporting our industries that are so
strong here."

Most of the exported chicken in the Cuba deal will be coming from
Simmons. The order, which includes 3,000 tons of frozen chicken legs,
will leave for Cuba in early January, said Simmons spokesman Donny Epp.

Mark Simmons, chairman of Simmons Foods, joined Hutchinson on the trip
to Cuba earlier this year.

"We are very thankful for the leadership in our state, and Gov.
Hutchinson, has has shown in working to open this market," said Mark
Simmons, chairman of Simmons. "We are certainly excited about this new
opportunity."

Some agricultural companies, including Tyson, traded with Cuba before
bird flu shut the country's border to poultry.

"We're glad Cuba has lifted its ban on Arkansas poultry products and
applaud Gov. Hutchinson for his work to help get it done," company
spokesman Worth Sparkman said. "Export markets like Cuba are important
to the poultry industry and especially to states like Arkansas."

Business on 12/19/2015

Source: Tyson, Simmons set to ship Cuba chicken -
http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2015/dec/19/tyson-simmons-set-to-ship-cuba-chicken--1/?f=business

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