Farms.com Home   News

Obama Announces Move Toward Normalizing Relations With Cuba

In a Dec. 17 statement, President Barack Obama announced that the United States will begin moving toward normalizing diplomatic relations with Cuba. Obama outlined several steps in the process, including the establishment of a U.S. embassy in Havana and lifting of certain restrictions that have inhibited business transactions between the U.S. and Cuba.

For agriculture one key move in Obama's action is to allow U.S. financial institutions to open accounts with their counterparts in
Cuba, making it easier for U.S. exporters to sell in Cuba, which has a population of 11 million people.

The U.S. has allowed agricultural exports to Cuba since 2001, but the process has been complicated because of the banking restrictions. Payments had to be routed from Cuban banks to banks in other countries before the money could be sent to the U.S.
Farm Bureau has long called for a removal of trade restrictions with Cuba, maintaining that expanded trade with the U.S. can serve as a cornerstone for additional reforms.

"The president's opening to Cuba promises to improve trade conditions by making it easier for Cuba to buy U.S. agricultural and food products. This is welcome news for our nation's farmers and ranchers," American Farm Bureau Federation President Bob Stallman said in a statement.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

‘Our mission is to feed the world’: Syngenta

Video: ‘Our mission is to feed the world’: Syngenta


Feroz Sheikh, Chief Information and Digital Officer, Syngenta Group, is one of the delegates at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Sheikh says that Syngenta AG, a Chinese-owned global agricultural technology company headquartered in Basel, wants to use cutting edge innovation to help feed a world population scheduled to hit 10 million in 2050.