I supermercati svizzeri saranno inondati di carne bovina a buon mercato e piena di ormoni dopo l’accordo tariffario statunitense?

    https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/agribusiness/explainer-will-swiss-supermarkets-be-inundated-with-cheap-hormone-filled-beef-after-new-tariff-deal-with-us/90393929

    di Heavy-Mycologist-204

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    18 commenti

    1. aussieskier23 on

      Australia signed a similar deal but no American beef is being imported – no point when ours is so good.

    2. SaraJuno on

      Have already seen it in my local migros. Make sure to check the labels from now on.

    3. Clear-Neighborhood46 on

      US beef is no more cheap. Look at the beef price in US grocery store.

    4. Ima_Wreckyou on

      Is it cheap though? I thought even the Americans import beef from Argentina because theirs is too expensive

    5. Objective-Ad7394 on

      I mean at the end of the day the consumer has to buy it…
      I wouldn’t mind some of their high end beef. The rst won’t be bought anyway.

    6. halo_skydiver on

      Even if it is, people can still choose what they eat. I buy my meat from the local farmer.

    7. Supercoloc on

      can we please chill out ?
      this deal won’t automaticall change the swiss regulations around meat safety nor import quotas. The Parlament will need to change laws maybe – and there might be referenda, the federal administration will need to change their ordinances, we will be able to have debates each step of the way.

      This also means that it will take times, enough time for tariffs to be rulled illegal by the supreme court ? enough time for the midterms to change their legislative ? enough time for trump to be gone (one way or an other ?

      the debate about what ifs makes journalists happy, but it’s futile at this stage

    8. billcube on

      We’ll buy much more liquified natural gas (LNG), not beef.

    9. BansheeGriffin on

      Stores aren’t the issue, there’s labels. You’ll get the inferior US meat in restaurants.

      The kind of restaurant that have signs claiming to use local products “whenever possible”, but you’re clearly eating the budget microvave food from Topcc.

    10. geckomato on

      TopCC has had US beef forever, as well as Argentina, Uruguay and Wagyu.

      US beef typically comes in 3 quality levels: 
      Prime (highest quality)
      Choice 
      Select

      At TopCC US beef is more expensive as the Argentina and Uruguay selections, and I have never seen “Prime” quality.

      With these new tarrifs, I wonder if the price for US beef comes down.

    11. Psico_Penguin on

      I will keep checking the labels of my food, thank you.

      And I appreciate the swiss meat on the supermarket having the flag visible.

    12. organicacid on

      Thinking that the beef is “filled with hormones” is just being scientifically illiterate.

    13. cheapcheap1 on

      I don’t understand how this deal is possible at all. We are part of the common EU market. All products in Switzerland must adhere to EU standards and are in turn legal to sell in the entire EU.

      I thought we could allow US imports on a case-by-case basis, but not as a general rule. Wouldn’t generally accepting inferior US products that fail to adhere to EU standards violate the common EU market rules?

    14. JoshDrako on

      Local beef is not filled with hormones?

      At least with antibiotics and other chemicals

    15. As with the Gammelfleisch and secret horse meat scandals today is just another great day to give up meat!

      Alternatives have improved a lot since then in terms of healthiness, taste, mouthfeel and protein density. And if you want to go completely unprocessed there are still plenty of fresh legumes that aren’t stuffed with hormones.

      And another great side effect: probably your most effective individual contribution to a more sustainable life. Your ancestors will thank you.

      And you may even meet them if you reduce your meat consumption today: meat and especially beef contribute to a shorter lifespan due to cardiovascular complications later in life. The average Swiss resident consumes 3x of the recommended amount of meat, so start today and look for alternatives.

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