Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil Wins Back China's Poultry Market After Swift Biosecurity Cleanup


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) China has reopened its market to Brazilian chicken with immediate effect after a months-long suspension triggered by a single H5N1 case on a commercial farm in southern Brazil in mid-May.

Brazil disinfected the site, completed all prescribed sanitary actions, and-after weeks without new cases in commercial flocks-had its disease-free status acknowledged by international animal-health authorities in June.

With that verification in place, Beijing's risk review concluded and the door is now open again nationwide. For readers abroad: Brazil supplies roughly 35% of all chicken traded worldwide.

China is its largest buyer, especially for cuts that are popular in Asia and keep factory lines humming back in Brazil. When China paused purchases, ships were rerouted, inventories swelled, and prices wobbled.

Reopening restores predictability: processors can run closer to capacity, southern ports should see steadier flows, and Asian buyers regain a reliable pipeline into year-end. One notable exception remains-Canada still has a full suspension in place.



The story behind the story is about how modern food trade actually works. Markets don't just move on politics and headlines; they move on verifiable procedures.
Brazil's disciplined response restores trade and confidence
Brazil followed a playbook that quietly rewards discipline: contain the outbreak, document the cleanup, share data, invite audits, and resume trade.

That sequence-far from theatrical-tends to protect workers and consumers better than sprawling debates that keep barriers in place long after the science says otherwise. For investors and expats, the signal is clear: predictable, rules-based decisions reduce risk.

There is also a map here. Poultry jobs and income are concentrated in Brazil 's South and Center-West, where agribusiness is a core employer and exporter.

When a major buyer like China steps out, those regions feel it quickly; when it steps back in, confidence returns just as fast.

The political takeaway, without slogans: systems that reward competence, transparency, and private-sector efficiency tend to bounce back faster from shocks.

Today's reopening is less a diplomatic flourish than a case study in how technical rigor, not ideology, keeps global supply chains stable-and dinner tables supplied.

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The Rio Times

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