Dairy
Groups Welcome U.S. Government’s First Step Towards Resolution on NAFTA
Trucking Dispute
The
National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) and the U.S. Dairy Export Council (USDEC)
today welcomed the release by the Department of Transportation of an “initial
concept document” intended to allow for a long–haul, cross-border
Mexican trucking program that prioritizes safety, while complying with the U.S.
trade obligations to Mexico under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
The concept document is aimed at rectifying a trade spat between the two
countries that is hurting the U.S. dairy sector, among others.
In
response to long-standing lack of U.S. compliance with its trucking obligations
to Mexico under NAFTA, Mexico has been legally levying tariffs on a variety of
U.S. exports since March 2009. Since August 2010, that retaliation list has
included many U.S. cheeses.
“We
see this announcement as a positive first step towards resolution of this
long-running dispute,” said Tom Suber, USDEC president. “Since August,
exports of the targeted cheeses to Mexico have plunged by 66% through November
of last year. It is good that the United States recognized the heavy toll that
retaliation is having on the many impacted sectors, such as America’s dairy
industry, and has proposed to begin to move forward with working with Mexico to
find a way to address this issue.”
Jerry
Kozak, president and CEO of NMPF, concurred, adding, “Mexico is by far our
largest export market and therefore absorbs sizable quantities of the milk U.S.
dairy farmers produce. It is encouraging to see the U.S. initiate a path towards
a permanent resolution of this transportation issue that has been negatively
impacting the dairy industry, which has been caught in the resulting cross-fire
of this dispute.”
NMPF
and USDEC stressed the importance of the U.S. and Mexico governments working
together from this starting point to craft a mutually agreeable final resolution
to this issue, one that complies with U.S. trade commitments in order to avoid
future upheavals. The organizations urged members of Congress to support this
process and approve any resulting proposal from the negotiations between the
U.S. and Mexican governments.
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