[Korea Farmers' News Agency, Reporter Kim Kyung-wook] A new challenge has emerged for the domestic soybean industry. Although the cultivation area for domestic soybeans is expanding, it is still facing difficulties due to the price gap with imported soybeans and insufficient sales channels. News has come that U.S. soybeans, whose export path to China is blocked, are seeking to enter the Korean market. Concerns are growing that this could potentially destabilize the government's policy of encouraging the cultivation of alternative crops and efforts to expand domestic soybean consumption. Presidential National Security Office Director Lee Sang-ryul, during a press briefing on the 17th, responded to a question about whether the principles of agricultural product opening related to U.S.-Korea tariffs might change, stating, "In the U.S.-Korea trade negotiations, there are new developments regarding agricultural products."