First shipment of US beef arrives in Japan after easing ban (AP) Updated: 2005-12-16 10:53
The first shipment of U.S. beef to Japan in nearly two years arrived Friday
following the easing of an import ban imposed after America's first case of mad
cow disease, Japan's Health Ministry said.
About 4.6 tons of meat, including strip sirloin and chuck eye cuts as well as
beef tongues, arrived at Narita International Airport just east of Tokyo, the
Health Ministry said in a statement.
Japanese inspectors will check the shipment to see if it meets safety
guidelines laid down by Japan's government, quarantine official Yuji Kitayama
said. They will be trying to confirm the age of the cows from which the meat
came and ensure that the shipment doesn't contain suspect cuts from organs such
as brains or spinal cords.
Japan slapped a ban on imports of American beef in December 2003 after the
first case of mad cow disease was reported in the U.S. herd. After two years of
negotiations and a lengthy Japanese approval process, Tokyo opened its doors
Monday to meat from U.S. cows under 21 months of age.
Friday's shipment was processed at Selma, California-based Harris Ranch Beef
Co. and imported by Marudai Food Co., which said it will not sell the meat to
consumers but use it for internal testing.
"We have not dealt with American beef in two years," Marudai spokesman Tatsuo
Sawai said. "We want to see what its taste is like, how tough it is, how tender.
Our salesmen need to know this before they can start selling."
Before the ban, Japan purchased more American beef than any other country in
the world, buying US$1.4 billion worth in 2003. Since then, Australia has
surpassed the United States as the biggest beef exporter to Japan.
Japan estimates that under the new guidelines, some 5 million American cows
could prove eligible for export.
But a survey last week by the Kyodo news agency showed some 75 percent of
Japanese unwilling to eat U.S. beef because of mad cow fears, compared with 21
percent saying they would consume it.
Eating beef from cattle infected with mad cow disease, the common name for
bovine spongiform encephalopathy, can cause the fatal brain disorder
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.
While the United States has had two cases of mad cow disease, Japan has
reported 21 since 2001.
Although Japan has reported more cases, it tests every domestic cow that goes
to the slaughterhouse, and it initially demanded that the United States do the
same before resuming trade.
But Japan eventually agreed to allow imports of meat from cattle younger than
21 months because no cases of mad cow disease have ever been found in cows that
age.
Under the agreement, which also eased a ban on Canadian beef, North American
producers must certify the age of the cows and follow strict guidelines, such as
removing brains, spinal cords and other parts that are thought to transmit mad
cow disease.
Some ranchers are daunted by the task of breaking back into the Japanese
market.
Selling beef to Japan will generally mean keeping a paper trail from the
ranch to the feedlot to the slaughterhouse in order to verify that cattle are
killed at 20 months of age or younger. But birth records alone will not do and,
in many cases, producers will need third-party verification of their documents
and herds for corroboration, according to beef experts at Iowa State
University.
|