U.S. officials to visit Russia for talks on poultry imports

© RIA Novosti . Yu. Levyant / Go to the mediabank"At approximately 19:30 on December 31, I concluded a telephone conversation with. James Miller, deputy agriculture secretary of the United States. We agreed that the U.S. delegation will arrive here on January 17, and we will resolve this problem,"
At approximately 19:30 on December 31, I concluded a telephone conversation with. James Miller, deputy agriculture secretary of the United States. We agreed that the U.S. delegation will arrive here on January 17, and we will resolve this problem, - Sputnik International
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A U.S. delegation will arrive in Moscow this month for discussions on poultry imports from the United States after Russia tightened its regulations.

A U.S. delegation will arrive in Moscow this month for discussions on poultry imports from the United States after Russia tightened its regulations, Russia's chief sanitary official said on Sunday.

Russia introduced a law on January 1 strictly limiting the amount of chlorine that can be used in the processing of poultry, effectively banning all imports from the United States.

The head of consumer watchdog Rospotrebnadzor, Gennady Onishchenko, said on Ekho Moskvy radio that the U.S. delegation would arrive on January 17.

"At approximately 19:30 on December 31, I concluded a telephone conversation with. James Miller, deputy agriculture secretary of the United States. We agreed that the U.S. delegation will arrive here on January 17, and we will resolve this problem," Onishchenko said.

The new requirements, which apply to both imports and meat processed in Russia, state that the amount of chlorine in the solution used for the processing of poultry meat should not exceed the level set for drinking water, 0.3-0.5 milligrams per liter.

They also require that the fluid that separates when defrosting the meat should not exceed 4% of the total weight of the bird.

Experts say the new regulations first and foremost affect imports from the United States, where chlorine has been used as the primary anti-microbial treatment for a quarter of a century.

Reuters reported that Russia is U.S. poultry producers' top export market, worth $801 million in 2008.

 

MOSCOW, January 3 (RIA Novosti)

 

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