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Chile imports Uruguayan rapeseed to feed salmon

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Published Mar 28, 2024

Tridge summary

José Moat, a commercial advisor for rapeseed in Chile, has been discussing the importation of Uruguayan rapeseed, primarily used as salmon feed, due to a production shortfall in Chile. An agreement with Fadisol suggests a promising long-term partnership and a robust relationship between the two countries. Moat's visits to Uruguay are part of an effort to share Chile's advanced agronomic management techniques to enhance rapeseed production in Uruguay, leveraging Chile's extensive experience in the field.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

In dialogue with Rurales TV, José Moat, rapeseed commercial advisor in Chile, referred to the import of Uruguayan rapeseed by the trans-Andean country, where the crop originates as food for salmon, “work has been going on for a couple of years.” with rapeseed from Uruguay, we as a country have a production deficit.” Along these lines, an agreement has been made from Chile with the company Fadisol, where "it is clear that a business can be long-term, there is a good relationship with the company." Moat maintained that ...
Source: Agromeat
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