Quick Telecast
Expect News First

Americans say P.E.I. potatoes to be allowed into mainland U.S. ‘soon’

0 72


P.E.I. table potatoes will soon be allowed into the continental U.S. with some conditions, according to a news release Thursday from the United States Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS. 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency will lift its ban on exporting P.E.I. table or eating potatoes — but not seed or processing potatoes. 

“USDA has determined P.E.I. potatoes for consumption only may resume under specified conditions that will pose little risk of introducing potato wart disease into the United States,” said the release from APHIS.

Shipments of fresh potatoes to the U.S. mainland have been banned for months, following the discovery of potato wart in two P.E.I. fields in October.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency halted shipments of potatoes to the U.S. in November, prompted by a U.S. threat that it would act if Canada did not. Canadian officials were concerned that an American action would be more difficult to reverse.

“USDA bases all our agricultural trade decisions on sound science,” said U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack. “We are confident that table stock potatoes can enter the United States with appropriate safeguards in place to ensure the U.S. potato industry remains protected.”

The U.S. will require that P.E.I. imports, as well as the seed potatoes used to produce them, “originate from fields not known to be infested with potato wart or associated with known infestations,” the release stated. 

Other conditions state that P.E.I. potatoes must be:

  • washed and sprout-nipped.
  • graded to meet the U.S. No. 1 standard.
  • officially inspected by the national plant protection organization of Canada and certified as meeting USDA requirements.

“APHIS will continue to work with Canada to increase confidence in its long-term management plan for potato wart, specifically to finish processing remaining samples associated with recent detections, to expand surveillance of non-regulated fields in P.E.I. and to continue its national surveillance program,” the release added.

‘A great start’

P.E.I. Potato Board chair John Visser of Victoria-by-the-Sea says he doesn’t have details but the announcement sounds like “relatively good news … it’s a great start.”

‘It’s definitely the first positive news a lot of growers have heard for a long while,’ says P.E.I. Potato Board Chair John Visser. (CBC)

P.E.I. growers shipping to Puerto Rico say inspections stateside have been lengthy, and Visser said he hopes that won’t happen with potatoes heading into the mainland U.S.

He said he doesn’t know when Island growers will be able to begin shipping to the U.S. but hopes it will happen soon, as American buyers are anxious to have P.E.I. potatoes. 

U.S. potato growers fear that potato wart in Prince Edward Island is far from under control.— U.S. National Potato Council

He’d like to see P.E.I. seed potato shipments cleared for export to the U.S. soon, too.

Visser said he and other growers still can’t understand why the potato wart management plan that has been in place for years was deemed inadequate, saying growers “have great faith” in it. 

“It’s going to take a lot of work to get our reputation back, and also compensation for the potatoes that have been destroyed and the damage that was done,” he said. 

U.S. growers ‘dismayed’

The U.S. National Potato Council, the lobby group for American potato farmers, was quick to condemn the announcement, calling it “disappointing.” 

Bags of Prince Edward Island potatoes were given away in front of Parliament in Ottawa in December as P.E.I. farmers lobbied the Canadian government to open the U.S. border to its exports. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

“We are dismayed to learn that USDA is allowing P.E.I. table stock potatoes to resume shipments to the U.S. prior to completing soil tests for the destructive potato wart disease,” a news release from the council said. 

It said the frequency with which potato wart has been found on P.E.I., plus what it called a dramatic drop in the number of disease tests via soil samples, “should make U.S. regulators question the prevalence of the disease on the Island.”

“Today’s announcement by USDA overlooks the severity of the disease,” the release said. U.S. potato growers fear that potato wart in Prince Edward Island is far from under control. Today’s decision to allow potatoes from untested fields to enter the U.S. does not assuage their concerns.” 

The release urged the USDA to enact stricter control measures.

‘Long-awaited good news’

P.E.I. Premier Dennis King rose in the legislature Thursday to announce the border reopening, calling it “long-awaited good news.” 

‘It hasn’t been easy for anybody,’ P.E.I. Premier Dennis King said Thursday of the potato wart crisis that closed to U.S. border to P.E.I. potatoes. (P.E.I. Legislature)

He said some of the protocols to which P.E.I. potatoes will be subject are “a little bit concerning.”

King said he spoke with the P.E.I. Potato Board’s general manager, Greg Donald, who also characterized the move as good news. 

P.E.I. Opposition leader Peter Bevan-Baker also offered congratulations, adding “the devil here is going to be in the details,” noting the Americans’ news release did not specify a date when the border would reopen and does not mention access to the U.S. for P.E.I. seed potatoes. He urged the government to look more carefully at its potato wart mitigation plan to ensure such a crisis doesn’t happen again. 

Puerto Rico opened in February

Island farmers saw some relief last month when the border was opened to Puerto Rico, which is a major customer.

The U.S. fresh potato market is worth about $120 million a year to P.E.I. farmers. Unable to find markets for that many potatoes on short notice, farmers have had to destroy an estimated 300 million pounds (136 million kilograms) of potatoes.

Potato wart was first discovered on the Island in 2000, and that also led to a border closure. A management plan was developed in consultation with the Americans, and that kept the border open for 20 years.


P.E.I. table potatoes will soon be allowed into the continental U.S. with some conditions, according to a news release Thursday from the United States Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS. 

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency will lift its ban on exporting P.E.I. table or eating potatoes — but not seed or processing potatoes. 

“USDA has determined P.E.I. potatoes for consumption only may resume under specified conditions that will pose little risk of introducing potato wart disease into the United States,” said the release from APHIS.

Shipments of fresh potatoes to the U.S. mainland have been banned for months, following the discovery of potato wart in two P.E.I. fields in October.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency halted shipments of potatoes to the U.S. in November, prompted by a U.S. threat that it would act if Canada did not. Canadian officials were concerned that an American action would be more difficult to reverse.

“USDA bases all our agricultural trade decisions on sound science,” said U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack. “We are confident that table stock potatoes can enter the United States with appropriate safeguards in place to ensure the U.S. potato industry remains protected.”

The U.S. will require that P.E.I. imports, as well as the seed potatoes used to produce them, “originate from fields not known to be infested with potato wart or associated with known infestations,” the release stated. 

Other conditions state that P.E.I. potatoes must be:

  • washed and sprout-nipped.
  • graded to meet the U.S. No. 1 standard.
  • officially inspected by the national plant protection organization of Canada and certified as meeting USDA requirements.

“APHIS will continue to work with Canada to increase confidence in its long-term management plan for potato wart, specifically to finish processing remaining samples associated with recent detections, to expand surveillance of non-regulated fields in P.E.I. and to continue its national surveillance program,” the release added.

‘A great start’

P.E.I. Potato Board chair John Visser of Victoria-by-the-Sea says he doesn’t have details but the announcement sounds like “relatively good news … it’s a great start.”

‘It’s definitely the first positive news a lot of growers have heard for a long while,’ says P.E.I. Potato Board Chair John Visser. (CBC)

P.E.I. growers shipping to Puerto Rico say inspections stateside have been lengthy, and Visser said he hopes that won’t happen with potatoes heading into the mainland U.S.

He said he doesn’t know when Island growers will be able to begin shipping to the U.S. but hopes it will happen soon, as American buyers are anxious to have P.E.I. potatoes. 

U.S. potato growers fear that potato wart in Prince Edward Island is far from under control.— U.S. National Potato Council

He’d like to see P.E.I. seed potato shipments cleared for export to the U.S. soon, too.

Visser said he and other growers still can’t understand why the potato wart management plan that has been in place for years was deemed inadequate, saying growers “have great faith” in it. 

“It’s going to take a lot of work to get our reputation back, and also compensation for the potatoes that have been destroyed and the damage that was done,” he said. 

U.S. growers ‘dismayed’

The U.S. National Potato Council, the lobby group for American potato farmers, was quick to condemn the announcement, calling it “disappointing.” 

Bags of Prince Edward Island potatoes were given away in front of Parliament in Ottawa in December as P.E.I. farmers lobbied the Canadian government to open the U.S. border to its exports. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

“We are dismayed to learn that USDA is allowing P.E.I. table stock potatoes to resume shipments to the U.S. prior to completing soil tests for the destructive potato wart disease,” a news release from the council said. 

It said the frequency with which potato wart has been found on P.E.I., plus what it called a dramatic drop in the number of disease tests via soil samples, “should make U.S. regulators question the prevalence of the disease on the Island.”

“Today’s announcement by USDA overlooks the severity of the disease,” the release said. U.S. potato growers fear that potato wart in Prince Edward Island is far from under control. Today’s decision to allow potatoes from untested fields to enter the U.S. does not assuage their concerns.” 

The release urged the USDA to enact stricter control measures.

‘Long-awaited good news’

P.E.I. Premier Dennis King rose in the legislature Thursday to announce the border reopening, calling it “long-awaited good news.” 

‘It hasn’t been easy for anybody,’ P.E.I. Premier Dennis King said Thursday of the potato wart crisis that closed to U.S. border to P.E.I. potatoes. (P.E.I. Legislature)

He said some of the protocols to which P.E.I. potatoes will be subject are “a little bit concerning.”

King said he spoke with the P.E.I. Potato Board’s general manager, Greg Donald, who also characterized the move as good news. 

P.E.I. Opposition leader Peter Bevan-Baker also offered congratulations, adding “the devil here is going to be in the details,” noting the Americans’ news release did not specify a date when the border would reopen and does not mention access to the U.S. for P.E.I. seed potatoes. He urged the government to look more carefully at its potato wart mitigation plan to ensure such a crisis doesn’t happen again. 

Puerto Rico opened in February

Island farmers saw some relief last month when the border was opened to Puerto Rico, which is a major customer.

The U.S. fresh potato market is worth about $120 million a year to P.E.I. farmers. Unable to find markets for that many potatoes on short notice, farmers have had to destroy an estimated 300 million pounds (136 million kilograms) of potatoes.

Potato wart was first discovered on the Island in 2000, and that also led to a border closure. A management plan was developed in consultation with the Americans, and that kept the border open for 20 years.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Quick Telecast is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a comment
Ads Blocker Image Powered by Code Help Pro

Ads Blocker Detected!!!

We have detected that you are using extensions to block ads. Please support us by disabling these ads blocker.

buy kamagra buy kamagra online
Immediate Access Pro