American Frozen Food Institute President and CEO Kraig R. Naasz issued the following statement commending a joint agreement announced by President Obama and Mexican President Felipe Calderón to end a lengthy cross-border trucking dispute that has resulted in various U.S. frozen food exports being subject to punitive Mexican retaliatory tariffs.
“The agreement announced during President Calderón’s visit to Washington, D.C., this week represents a fair and equitable solution that will bring the U.S. into compliance with its international trade commitments and begin repairing the substantial economic harm suffered by frozen food producers.”
“AFFI has long engaged with federal policymakers to help end the protracted U.S.-Mexican trucking dispute, which has wreaked economic havoc on U.S. exporters of frozen potato products, frozen sweet corn and frozen ham in the form of lost jobs and lost market access.
“The agreement announced during President Calderón’s visit to Washington, D.C., this week represents a fair and equitable solution that will bring the U.S. into compliance with its international trade commitments and begin repairing the substantial economic harm suffered by frozen food producers.
“AFFI is committed to working with the White House and Congress to ensure the deal is fully implemented as soon as possible so that we can resume normal trade with Mexico and offer much needed relief to U.S. frozen food producers.”
The joint agreement creates a reciprocal, phased-in program that permits Mexican and U.S. long-haul carriers to engage in cross-border operations under the North American Free Trade Agreement. Mexico will reduce its penalty tariffs by 50 percent when the settlement is formally signed by both countries and will remove all remaining retaliatory tariffs following the first U.S. authorization allowing a Mexican carrier to engage in cross-border operations.
Mexico imposed a 20 percent tariff on U.S. frozen potato products in 2009 after the U.S. cancelled a cross-border trucking pilot program, costing U.S. exporters more than $33 million in lost revenue. Though that tariff was reduced to 5 percent in August 2010, Mexico expanded its tariff retaliation list to include imports of U.S. frozen sweet corn and frozen ham.
- 新闻
- 炸薯条和马铃薯特色产品
- American Frozen Food...
American Frozen Food Institute Welcomes Deal to End U.S.-Mexico Trucking Dispute

三月 04, 2011
Like to receive news like this by email? Join and Subscribe!
Get the latest potato industry news straight to your WhatsApp. Join the PotatoPro WhatsApp Community!
Related Topics:
Sponsored Content
精选企业
Related News

六月 08, 2026
McCain Foods to become Official Fries partner of the Tour de France in 2026
McCain Foods has announced a partnership with the Tour de France and will become the event's Official Fries partner in 2026. The agreement links the global frozen potato products manufacturer with one of the world's most recognized cycling events
六月 08, 2026
Lamb Weston plans closure of Broekhuizenvorst potato processing facility in the Netherlands
Lamb Weston plans to close its potato processing facility in Broekhuizenvorst, the Netherlands, as part of efforts to improve operational efficiency and align its supply chain with market conditions. The proposed closure affects about 110 employees.
六月 02, 2026
Lamb Weston Advances 2033 Sustainability Goals with Major FY2025 Achievements in New Global Sustainability Report
Lamb Weston’s FY2025 Sustainability Report highlights progress toward its 2033 goals, including a 15% reduction in injury rates, USD 830K+ in community donations, 6% lower freshwater use, 85% sustainable packaging, and 98% waste diversion. Sponsored Content
Latest News
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
哪里
Sponsored Content
