- China says US protectionism hurts agricultural cooperation
- Farmers should not pay for trade war, says Chinese envoy
- Beijing criticises US farmland purchase curbs as political
US protectionism is undermining agricultural cooperation with China, Beijing’s ambassador to Washington said, warning that farmers should not bear the price of the trade war between the world’s two largest economies.
“It goes without saying that protectionism is rampant, casting a shadow over China-US agricultural cooperation,” said Xie Feng, according to the transcript of a speech published by the Chinese embassy on Saturday.
Agriculture has emerged as a major point of contention between China and the US as the superpowers are locked in a tariff war launched by President Donald Trump.
China in March slapped levies of up to 15 per cent on $21 billion worth of American agricultural and food products in retaliation for sweeping US tariffs. Washington and Beijing this month extended a truce for 90 days, staving off triple-digit duties on each other’s goods.
US agricultural exports to China fell 53 per cent in the first half of the year from the same period in 2024, with a 51 per cent decline in soybeans, Xie said in the speech to a soybean industry event in Washington on Friday.
“American farmers, like their Chinese counterparts, are hardworking and humble,” Xie said. “Agriculture should not be hijacked by politics, and farmers should not be made to pay the price of a trade war.”
The envoy said agriculture is a promising area of cooperation and a “pillar of bilateral relations”. China has a comparative advantage in labour-intensive products, while the U.S. excels in land-intensive bulk commodities through mechanised, large-scale production, he said.
Last month US Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said Washington would curb farmland purchases by “foreign adversaries,” including China.
The Department of Agriculture said it had fired 70 foreign contract researchers after a national security review intended to secure the US food supply from adversaries including China, Russia, North Korea and Iran.
Xie dismissed the US concerns. “Chinese investors hold less than 0.03 per cent of US agricultural land, so where does the claim of ‘threatening US food security’ even come from,” he said, calling the U.S. restrictions a “political manipulation”.
US soybean exporters risk missing out on billions of dollars’ worth of sales to China this year as trade talks drag on and buyers in the top oilseed importer lock in cargoes from Brazil for shipment during the key US marketing season, traders say.
Published on August 24, 2025