Asia - Pacific

China, Japan hold talks over seafood import ban

China banned Japanese seafood after release of treated radioactive water from Fukushima plant began in August 2023

Anadolu staff  | 12.04.2025 - Update : 12.04.2025
China, Japan hold talks over seafood import ban Buyers inspect frozen tunas at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo, Japan on November 16, 2014.

ANKARA

Chinese and Japanese officials have held technical talks over Beijing's ban on Japanese seafood imports, local media reported on Saturday.

The online talks were held on Thursday between China's General Administration of Customs and the Japanese Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Ministry, according to Kyodo News.

However, China's customs administration said the technical talks do not mean that Beijing will restart the imports of Japanese seafood products soon.

The latest talks were held after China on Monday said it had detected no abnormalities in seawater and marine life samples following the release of treated radioactive water from Japan's damaged Fukushima power plant.

The Chinese statement came after independent sampling was done by Chinese authorities in late February under the International Atomic Energy Agency monitoring framework.

China implemented a complete ban on Japanese seafood imports just after the release of treated radioactive water from the Fukushima plant began in August 2023.

Last September, Tokyo and Beijing reached an agreement to gradually resume seafood imports from Japan, contingent on China’s participation in monitoring efforts.

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