en.Wedoany.com Reported - After the United States exempted strategic Brazilian products such as meat and coffee from its new tariff proposal, the credibility of Brazilian agriculture's defense system has come into focus. This development demonstrates that in a global market with increasingly stringent sanitary requirements and traceability standards, the ability to certify food quality has become a core asset for agribusiness.

Experts analyze that this is not only a commercial victory but also a direct return on Brazil's decades-long continuous investment in regulation, certification, and sanitary control, reflecting the close link between Brazil's export competitiveness and its agricultural defense system.
Janus Pablo Macedo, President of the National Union of Federal Agricultural Inspectors (Anffa Sindical), stated that the international recognition received by Brazilian agricultural products directly depends on the robustness of this system. Macedo emphasized that the exclusion of meat and coffee from U.S. tariffs proves Brazil's commercial added value and, more importantly, reflects global market respect for the quality of its products and its agricultural defense system.
Brazilian Federal Agricultural Inspectors (Auditores Fiscais Federais Agropecuários) perform functions across all links of the production chain, including inspection of animal and plant products, import and export certification, and international quarantine monitoring at ports and borders. Macedo pointed out that Brazil's true barrier against international trade fluctuations lies in technical consistency; the sanitary standards, traceability systems, and certification processes implemented by inspectors provide Brazilian products with the legal assurance required by global markets.
As international buyers impose increasingly strict requirements on food safety, sustainability, and traceability, the value of the official sanitary control system as a competitive tool becomes evident, even serving as a key barrier against commercial protectionism. Industry experts believe that maintaining international market trust depends not only on the quality of exported products themselves but also on a country's ability to sustain a strong technical regulatory and certification system.
In an increasingly demanding global market, agricultural defense has transcended its regulatory function to become one of the comprehensive factors supporting the competitiveness of Brazilian agribusiness in major international trade flows.
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