Japan increases imports of Russian king crab thanks to nearly 60 percent price drop

Published Jan 17, 2024

Tridge summary

U.S. sanctions have led Russian crab suppliers to find new markets, with Japan becoming a new destination for discounted king crab, snow crab, and horsehair crab. The U.S. introduced an embargo on Russian seafood imports in March 2022, while Japan removed Russia's "most favored nation" status and slightly raised tariff rates in April 2022. Despite the raised tariff rates, Russian crab shipments to Japan have continued, including king crab, snow crab, and horsehair crab.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

U.S. sanctions are forcing Russian crab suppliers to find new markets, and Japan has become a new destination for deeply discounted king crab, snow crab, and horsehair crab.The U.S., which was formerly the biggest purchaser of crab from Russia, introduced an embargo on imports of Russian seafood in March 2022 as part of sanctions related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The country recently expanded that ban to include products that stem from Russia but were processed by third-party nations.Japan similarly introduced sanctions at the time of Russia’s invasion by removing the country’s “most favored nation” status in April 2022, but this move did not ban imports like U.S. sanctions did; it only slightly raised tariff rates.As a result of Russia’s stripped status, Japan’s customs duties on Russian-origin crab rose from 4 percent to 6 percent, and the duty on salmon and trout jumped ...

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