• About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Monday, December 15, 2025
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
Field Crops news
  • Home
  • News
  • AgroTech & Innovation
  • Science
  • Sustainability
  • Market News
  • Research & Development
  • Home
  • News
  • AgroTech & Innovation
  • Science
  • Sustainability
  • Market News
  • Research & Development
No Result
View All Result
Field Crops news
No Result
View All Result
Home Import

The Global Feed Grain Shift: Thailand’s Tariff Move and What It Signals for Agriculture

by Tatiana Ivanova
7 December 2025
in Import, News
0
The Global Feed Grain Shift: Thailand’s Tariff Move and What It Signals for Agriculture
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Thailand, a major feed grain consumer and a traditional buyer from neighboring Southeast Asian nations, has announced a dramatic policy shift. As part of a broader trade agreement with the United States, it will eliminate the 20% in-quota tariff on U.S. feed corn and increase its import quota from 54,600 metric tons to 1 million metric tons annually—an 18.3-fold increase. This commitment, part of a pledge to import approximately $2.6 billion worth of U.S. agricultural products, sends ripples across global agricultural trade lanes.

This move is strategically multi-faceted. Primarily, it secures a reliable, large-scale supply of a critical raw material—feed corn—for Thailand’s robust livestock sector, which is central to its export-oriented pork and poultry industries. The government explicitly aims to “sufficiently secure raw materials needed for livestock feed production.” However, recognizing the potential impact on its own corn farmers, Thailand has built in safeguards. The import window for this U.S. corn is restricted to February through June, avoiding the key domestic harvest period in the fourth quarter. Furthermore, feed mills importing U.S. corn are mandated to purchase three times the import volume in domestic Thai corn, a direct mechanism to support local growers.

Perhaps the most forward-looking aspect of this policy is its environmental linkage. Thailand announced it will block imports of feed corn from countries practicing slash-and-burn agriculture to reduce air pollution. This directly impacts its current major suppliers—Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia—where such practices are prevalent. This aligns with growing global consumer and corporate demand for deforestation and burn-free supply chains. According to a 2023 report by the FAO and UNEP, agricultural residue burning is a major contributor to transboundary haze and greenhouse gas emissions in Southeast Asia, prompting importers to seek more sustainable sourcing. The U.S. corn sector, largely powered by large-scale mechanized production, is positioning itself as an alternative, despite its own environmental debates around inputs and monoculture.

Thailand’s policy is not an isolated event but a microcosm of modern agricultural trade’s complexities. It balances domestic economic interests (supporting local farmers while securing cheap feed for industry), geopolitical trade obligations (fulfilling agreements with a key partner), and emerging sustainability standards. For farmers and agribusinesses worldwide, it underscores that market access is increasingly tied not just to price and quality, but to verifiable production practices. The re-routing of a million-ton corn stream from Southeast Asia to the U.S. Midwest will create winners and losers, alter local price structures, and set a precedent for how environmental criteria can be leveraged as both policy tool and trade barrier. The future of commodity trade will be written at this intersection of economics, policy, and sustainability.

Tags: agricultural policyFeed CornGlobal Tradeimport quotalivestock feedslash-and-burn agriculturesupply chain shiftsustainable sourcingtariff eliminationThailandtrade agreementU.S. corn

Tatiana Ivanova

Next Post
Wheat Market Whiplash: Deciphering Volatility, Export Signals, and Shifting Global Supply

Wheat Market Whiplash: Deciphering Volatility, Export Signals, and Shifting Global Supply

Newsletter

Only 25% of Russia’s 2024 Wheat Harvest Qualifies as Grade 3: A Sign of the Season’s Challenges

Only 25% of Russia’s 2024 Wheat Harvest Qualifies as Grade 3: A Sign of the Season’s Challenges

31 August 2024

Export Duty on Wheat Reduced by 6.4%, Barley and Corn Remain Zero

22 July 2024

From Importer to Exporter: Decoding Zimbabwe’s Record-Breaking Wheat Revolution

12 November 2025

Wheat Quality in 2024 Surpasses Last Year: A Positive Outlook for Farmers and Exporters

19 October 2024

John Deere Unveils New Harvesting Technology to Emerging Ag Leaders

29 July 2024

Celebrating Excellence: The World’s Best Rice Contest at the World Rice Conference

2 October 2024

NZ Start-Up Innovates with Safflower as Dairy Substitute

13 June 2024

Pakistan Acts to Prevent Wheat Storage Losses: A Timely Intervention for Food Security

11 March 2025

Wheat Sown in Dry Land: Farmers Face Uncertain Harvest Due to Persistent Drought in Edirne

17 November 2024

EU Wheat and Barley Production Forecast Rises Amidst Regional Weather Contrasts – What Farmers Need to Know

5 June 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Call us: +51 93 999 5140

© 2020-2024 Field Crops news

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Science
  • Sustainability
  • AgroTech & Innovation
  • Market News
  • Science
  • Research & Development
  • About
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 Field Crops news