Text Only
Search Special English

Japan Awaits Final Tests Before End to Ban on U.S. Beef

26 June 2006
Agriculture Report - Download MP3 audio clip
Agriculture Report - Download RealAudio audio clip
Listen to Agriculture Report audio clip

Correction attached

I’m Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Japan agreed last week to import beef from the United States again.  But first, Japanese officials will inspect American meat processors as a final step to be sure the beef is safe.

The Japanese government banned American beef in December of two thousand three.  At that time, the United States reported its first case of mad cow disease.  The official name is bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or B.S.E.  Scientists link the brain disease in cows to a rare version in humans.

The Japanese government eased its import ban last December, after two years.  But the discovery in January of backbone material in a shipment of meat led officials to renew the ban.  Experts say spinal cords may spread B.S.E. 

To reduce the risk of B.S.E., beef products exported to Japan must come from cattle twenty months or younger. 

Under the new agreement, Japanese experts will inspect all thirty-five American meat-processing centers permitted to export to Japan.  The teams are expected to finish their work by July twenty-first. 

In the future, Japanese officials will be able to join American inspectors for surprise inspections.  Also, Japan has agreed to consider steps like the rejection of individual shipments instead of a complete ban.

The agreement followed long negotiations by agricultural and trade officials.  Lawmakers in Congress have proposed to punish Japan with high customs if it does not open its market by August thirty-first.

The United States was one of the largest exporters of beef until the finding of B.S.E. in a cow in Washington state in two thousand three.  After that, exports dropped by more than eighty percent.  A second infected cow was found in Texas last year. 

But exports have started to recover.  The government says it expects American farmers to export more than four hundred thousand metric tons of beef this year.  Still, that is less than half the levels in two thousand three.

The United States is the world's largest producer and user of beef, as well as the biggest importer.  Japan is the second biggest importer.  But until two thousand three, it was the top market for American beef.  That year, Japan imported more than one thousand million dollars worth.  Since then, Australia and New Zealand have increased their beef exports to Japan.

This VOA Special English Agriculture Report was written by Mario Ritter.  If you would like to read and listen to our report online, go to voaspecialenglish.com.  I'm Steve Ember.

---

Correction: Officials have announced three cases of mad cow disease in the United States, not two; the third was reported in Alabama in March.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
American History Series: Debating the Powerful Bank of the US  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Visiting Seven of America’s Natural Wonders  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: The Application Process  Audio Clip Available
Health: Keeping Ears Clean  Audio Clip Available
How Sigmund Freud Changed What People Thought About the Mind  Audio Clip Available
Growing Crops With Less Water  Audio Clip Available
The Making of One of Jazz's Most Influential Recordings  Audio Clip Available
'Rent-a-Light' Seen as a Bright Idea in Kenya  Audio Clip Available
Marlon Brando, 1924-2004: One of the Greatest Actors of All Time  Audio Clip Available
Between Political Left and Right, Obama Is Urged to Seek the Middle Ground  Audio Clip Available
You Do Not Have to Be a Rocket Scientist to Understand This  Audio Clip Available
Michael Crichton Wrote About the Scarier Side of Science and Technology  Audio Clip Available
US Treasury Changes Plans, Won't Buy Toxic Securities  Audio Clip Available