In response to China's ban, Pingtung County government in Taiwan is helping farmers and fishermen in reducing the impact

Published 2022년 8월 3일

Tridge summary

China has imposed a unilateral ban on the import of citrus, aquatic products, and food from Taiwan, affecting around 3,323 food manufacturers. Pingtung County, the largest producer of lemons in Taiwan, is among the areas most affected. The county is urging farmers, fishermen, and the real estate industry to adapt, and is exploring alternative channels for export. The ban has impacted various products, including local agricultural and fishery ingredients, and marks the latest in a series of unilateral bans by China on Taiwanese products.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

China once again unilaterally announced a ban on the import of citrus, aquatic products and food from Taiwan. The Pingtung County Government urgently took stock of the agricultural and fishery industries that may be affected in the county. Among them, Pingtung is the largest producer of lemons in Taiwan. Fortunately, it has now entered the end of the production season. Limited, the county magistrate Pan Mengan instructed the county government team to discuss countermeasures and cooperate with the central government to fully assist farmers, fishermen and the real estate industry to minimize the impact. According to the China Taiwan Office’s announcement of prohibited items, citrus includes lemons, grapefruits, oranges, and aquatic products such as chilled white hairtail and frozen bamboo mackerel, and a total of 3,323 Taiwanese food manufacturers have been suspended from importing. Many of them use Taiwan's local agricultural and fishery ingredients. Pan Mengan instructed in the ...
Source: Turnnewsapp

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