China's imports of soyabeans from the United States in February surged from January as the cargoes booked following a truce in the trade war between the two countries arrived, according to customs data published on Monday. China brought in 907,754 tonnes of US soyabeans in February, up from 135,814 tonnes in January, the General Administration of Customs said. However, that was just a fraction of the 3.35 million tonnes imported in February 2018 as Beijing's hefty tariffs on US shipments curbed purchases.
China, the world's biggest oilseed importer, agreed to resume some US soyabean purchases after US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed on Dec. 1 to a 90-day truce in their trade dispute. China typically buys soyabeans from the United States in the last quarter and the first couple of months of the year, when the US harvest dominates the market. But Chinese buyers have steered clear of US produce amid the tit-for-tat trade dispute and scooped up Brazilian beans instead.
Chinese imports of the oilseed from America, its second-largest supplier, fell sharply last year and ground to a halt in November. Limited buying resumed after the two countries agreed to the truce, but China only bought 9.4 million tonnes of US soyabeans through the end of February, down from 27.7 million tonnes at the same time a year earlier.
It committed to buy an additional 10 million tonnes during talks in Washington last month, US Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Twitter on Feb. 22. Meanwhile, China brought in 1.986 million tonnes of Brazilian soyabeans in February, up 13 percent from the 1.75 million tonnes in the same month last year, customs data showed. China crushes soyabeans to produce soyameal for its massive livestock herds, but an African swine fever epidemic has dampened Chinese demand for animal feed.
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