* AgMin sees 780,000 tonnes poultry imports in 2010
* Comments come as U.S. chicken banned
By Aleksandras Budrys
MOSCOW, Jan 25 (Reuters) - Russia, which has effectively banned U.S. chickens, plans to stop importing poultry altogether within three years, its farm minister said on Monday, setting a new deadline for becoming self-sufficient in that sector.
Russia's billion-dollar drive to cut dependency on chicken imports has concerned major foreign suppliers, including the United States, which earned about $800 million selling poultry to its biggest export market the year before last.
Agriculture Minister Yelena Skrynnik said on Monday that Russia was importing 780,000 tonnes a year of poultry meat. This is the amount set in a 2010 quota. [ID:nLDE5BK0BA]
"Within three years, we must cut this to zero," she was quoted as saying in a statement issued by the ministry.
Russia effectively halted U.S. poultry imports when it banned meat treated with chlorine from Jan. 19. Moscow insists the United States should observe its food safety rules, while U.S. critics have said the bans could be politically motivated. Talks between Russian watchdog bodies and visiting U.S. officials last week ended without any commitment from Moscow to reopen its market. Though more negotiations are planned, Russia has already moved to secure alternative supplies. [ID:nLDE60K1AZ]
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, speaking after the U.S. ban came into force, said Russia should not only cover its own domestic needs but export poultry meat in the next four to five years. [ID:nLDE60D1JG].
First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov, who oversees the farm sector, said in April 2009 that Moscow aimed to become self-sufficient in poultry meat and pork -- and even start to exporting meat -- as soon as 2012. [ID:nL3165254]
The Russian Poultry Breeders Union, a powerful industry lobby, as well as U.S. experts said at the time that Russia would still be likely to need poultry imports after 2012. [ID:nLM493293] [ID:nNO9423693]
Skrynnik said the government planned to prepare federal and regional programmes to develop domestic poultry breeding in the period to 2015.
She said only 22 of Russia's 83 regions were self-sufficient in poultry meat. Poultry production in 2009 rose by 13 percent over 2008, she said, without providing tonnages.
The Poultry Breeders Union estimated 2008 domestic poultry meat output at 2.3 million tonnes. {ID:nLM493293]
As Russia develops its poultry breeding, it has cut import tariff quotas, under which suppliers may ship determined volumes of poultry meat at a discount import tariff. Volumes are being cut to 550,000 tonnes in 2012 from 952,000 tonnes in 2009.