miércoles, 23 de enero de 2008

US remains Cuba's top food supplier

US remains Cuba's top food supplier
Posted on Mon, Jan. 21, 2008
By WILL WEISSERT
Associated Press Writer

HAVANA --
The United States remained Cuba's main supplier of food and farm
products in 2007, selling the communist-run island more than $600
million in agricultural exports despite its trade embargo, a top
official said Monday.

Cuba imported roughly the same amount of agricultural products as it did
in 2006, but rising production and transportation costs forced it to
spend $30 million more than the $570 million it paid two years ago for
the same goods, said Pedro Alvarez, chairman of Cuba's food import
company Alimport.

Alvarez's comments came during a joint news conference with California
Secretary of Food and Agriculture A.G. Kawamura, who is in Cuba on a
trade mission and is hoping America's largest food-producing state can
one day sell as much as $180 million in agricultural products to the
island. It was the state's first agricultural mission to Cuba.

Washington's nearly 50-year-old trade embargo prevents U.S. tourists
from visiting Cuba and prohibits nearly all trade. But a law passed by
the U.S. Congress in 2000 allows the Cuban government to buy U.S. food
and agricultural products with direct cash payments.

Cuba at first balked at the measure, but reversed course after a
hurricane ravaged parts of the island in November 2001. The government
has since spent more than $2.7 billion on U.S. farm products and the
related shipping and banking expenses that it factors into import
totals, Alvarez said.

The U.S. has been the island's top food source since 2003.

U.S. companies in 35 states ship roughly 1,600 types of agricultural
products to Cuba, Alvarez said, declining to specify which state is its
top supplier, or which product its top import. U.S. wheat, chicken and
soy are big sellers, he added.

California produces 400 types of farm products, including wheat, wine
and all types of fruits, vegetables and nuts. Kawamura said it exports
about a quarter of that produce, but sends less than $1 million in goods
a year to Cuba.

"That's a very small amount of money compared to the rest of the states
that are doing business here," Kawamura said, noting that a study by his
office found $180 million in Californian products that could potentially
be exported to the island.

Kawamura was accompanied by owners of some top California agricultural
firms, who are negotiating private contracts directly with Cuban
authorities. He also planned to meet with government officials and tour
state-run farms.

Agricultural secretaries from 19 states have visited Cuba, although
Kawamura is the first from California to do so.

"The door's already been opened. There's plenty of business being done
here," he said. "Some of us arguably might be late getting here, but
we're here."

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/world/AP/story/388293.html

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