Welcome to jctrans.net , Join Free |  Sign In
GMT+8 TUESDAY  13:40 2013/01/29 中文站
Exhibitions

Executive Talks

1of5

Interview with Milad M Istefanous, Executive Director of Philomina Global Services Co. Ltd.

Interview with Milad M Istefanous, Executive Director of Philomina Global Services Co. Ltd.

Philomina Global Head office located at Khartoum City that is well known, and having branches @ Port Sudan (Seaport City), and our modern office systems and all staff to give excellent services to our potential customers and worldwide associates.

Interview with Filipe Garcia, Branch Manager of Inicio transitarios Lda

Interview with Filipe Garcia, Branch Manager of Inicio transitarios Lda

Since the year 2000 INÍCIO TRANSITÁRIOS has been dedicated with total commitment to the creation of door-to-door transport solutions, regarding maritime and air logistics, on an international basis.

Interview with Ken Zhu,of Coeffort (Shanghai) Logistics & SCM Co., Ltd

Interview with Ken Zhu,of Coeffort (Shanghai) Logistics & SCM Co., Ltd

Coeffort was established in January 2015, core business of Coeffort is supply chain management and provide professional solutions, including supply chain financing, supply chain design, procurement and distribution, international customs clearance agent, executive stock trusteeship, Department of outsourcing, outsourcing processing and distribution management, supply chain services. I hope our business can do for customers "time Save", "money Save", "way touching One".

Interview with Arturo Chavez, Commercial Manager  of Smart Logistics Group

Interview with Arturo Chavez, Commercial Manager of Smart Logistics Group

SMART LOGISTICS GROUP is a premier transportation and logistics company, with coverage in SPAIN/EUROPE. Our value-added services portfolio includes import and export freight management, truck brokerage, intermodal, load/mode and network optimization, and global visibility. We provide freight forwarding, customs brokerage, warehousing and all other logistics services.

Interview with Ordan Cargo, Managing Director of Ordan Cargo Ltd

Interview with Ordan Cargo, Managing Director of Ordan Cargo Ltd

We are " ORDAN CARGO LTD" a freight forwarding & logistics company based in Tel Aviv, Israel since 2001 having presences at all main ports ASHDOD/HAIFA/TLV for Import/Export/Cross SEA/AIR. We provide excellent and creative logistics solutions as well as quality service with competitive prices.

Neigh...I mean, nay, I say, when it comes to international trade

Source:wcfcourier    2013-3-18 9:09:00

The two events have more in common than a matched team of plow horses.

Ikea's woes began in late February when a horse-meat-in-lasagna scandal raced across Britain. It soon galloped (sorry) into Ireland, Poland, France and, later, Sweden. Shortly thereafter, a lab in the Czech Republic found horse DNA in a bag of the frozen meatballs that Ikea, famously, sells at its big blue stores throughout Europe.

So far, the source of the Secretariat meatballs, ah, Swedish meatballs, has not been found and probably won't. By law, whole muscle cuts of meats in the European Union must be identified by country of origin while processed meats do not.

In all likelihood that wide-open barn door (ugh) will be closed soon across the 27-nation EU.

Why on earth would food-centric Europeans even buy meatballs at a furniture store? For the same reason Americans buy pizza and burritos at a gas station--it's cheap, convenient and it's pizza and burritos, right?

Maybe, and maybe that's also why most of us still pray before we eat, commented one New York Times' reader in response to a March 9 column on the Norse horse farce: We're praying that what's on our fork actually is what we think it is.

Just as the European horse meat scandal was (I just can't help it) being put out to pasture, USDA took another crack at writing the rules to implement COOL, the now 11-year-old law that was supposed to inform consumers on the origin of the meat, fish and poultry they buy.

Supposed to but never really did because Big Ag and Big Agbiz called in Congressional markers to ensure it was delayed, watered down, then challenged as protectionist. Last May the World Trade Organization obliged; it tossed COOL.

Big Ag's big beef?

Their price-flattening, cross-border flow of livestock, chiefly cattle, they claimed, was far more important to them and international trade than you knowing if the hamburger on your grill came from Nebraska or Nicaragua.

The new USDA rules, which it believes are in "compliance with U.S. international trade obligations," are simple. They refocus the old WTO-violating "Product of the U.S" label to a more exact "Born, Raised and Slaughtered in the United States."

If, for example, the meat is from an animal born in Canada, then fed and slaughtered in the U.S., the new label will read "Born in Canada, Raised and Slaughtered in the United States."

It’s clear, precise information U.S. consumers have overwhelmingly said they want and need. Most U.S. livestock farmers want it, too, because all want their homegrown product identified at home, the richest, most competitive food market in the world.

Meatpackers and their "lackeys"--a word often used by U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, to describe commodity groups like the National Cattlemen's Beef Association who have fought COOL -- hate it because, they explain, COOL unfairly targets imports as inferior. That claim, however, also serves to disguise a key benefit of not labeling, the international movement of price-affecting livestock and meat.

Canada and Mexico also hate COOL. Both say it limits their exports (mostly cattle) to the U.S.

USDA trade data, however, shows otherwise. The total number of cattle collectively exported from Mexico and Canada to the U.S. from 2008, when COOL finally was implemented, to 2012, when it was declared protectionist, was 2.2 million head, 2 million, 2.3 million, 2.1 million and 2.6 million, respectively.

If that's protectionism then we're all a bunch of meatballs -- Angus or Appaloosa -- when it comes to international trade because facts simply do not matter.