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Asia Pacific | Aussie beef captures market share in JapanAustralian exports o...

Published: Jun 11, 2004

Asia Pacific

Aussie beef captures market share in Japan
Australian exports of beef to Japan hit record levels, with the country supplying 90 percent of Japan's imported beef, according to the Cattle Council of Australia.

Grading for Quality
Australia launches a new method of grading meat.

Malaysian Promotion
Butchers help promote Australian red meat in Asia.

South Korea extends ban on US beef
South Korea has extended its import ban on American beef, imposed after a mad cow disease outbreak in Washington State last year

Americas

AMI's Boyle dismisses R-CALF's demands regarding Canadian beef
Responding to previous statements by Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund United Stockgrowers of America's CEO Bill Bullard that Canadian beef is unsafe and should be banned from the United States until further study, AMI President and CEO J. Patrick Boyle said in an interview that aired this week on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's television program "Countrywide" that the demands were "unnecessary" and "unpersuasive."

Asia Pacific

Aussie beef captures market share in Japan
Australian exports of beef to Japan hit record levels, with the country supplying 90 percent of Japan's imported beef, according to the Cattle Council of Australia.

Grading for Quality
Australia launches a new method of grading meat.

Malaysian Promotion
Butchers help promote Australian red meat in Asia.

South Korea extends ban on US beef
South Korea has extended its import ban on American beef, imposed after a mad cow disease outbreak in Washington State last year

Americas

AMI's Boyle dismisses R-CALF's demands regarding Canadian beef
Responding to previous statements by Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund United Stockgrowers of America's CEO Bill Bullard that Canadian beef is unsafe and should be banned from the United States until further study, AMI President and CEO J. Patrick Boyle said in an interview that aired this week on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's television program "Countrywide" that the demands were "unnecessary" and "unpersuasive."