China and Taiwan: Mangoes found to contain a high level of exocarp insects, causing concern

Published 2023년 8월 23일

Tridge summary

China has suspended the import of mangoes from Taiwan due to the detection of the "Pacific Gap Scale Insect" on the mangoes exported to Taiwan. Hu Zhongyi, Director of the Agriculture and Food Administration of the Ministry of Agriculture, questions whether China's suspension complies with WTO regulations as no other exporting countries have reported the same issue. Hu Zhongyi also suggests guiding farmers to export mangoes to advanced countries with higher unit prices and establishing a system for supplying orchards to ensure proper management and control of pests like scale insects.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

China yesterday announced the suspension of the import of mangoes from my country on the grounds that the "Pacific Gap Scale Insect" was detected in the mangoes exported to and sold in my country. Hu Zhongyi, Director of the Agriculture and Food Administration of the Ministry of Agriculture, pointed out in an interview today (22) that the mango skin is bright and there are residual scale insects The probability is very low. Other trading countries have not responded to the scale insect problem. China claims to have found two batches. He still finds it "strange"; the Agriculture and Food Administration will guide farmers to export mangoes to advanced countries with high unit prices, and establish a system for supplying orchards. Hu Zhongyi, who presided over the "2023 National Rice and Grain Boutique Souvenirs Creative Competition" today, was interviewed and pointed out that generally exported mangoes are treated with "warm soup" (hot water), and the chances of residual scale ...
Source: Agriharvest

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