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Approximately 90 percent of U.S. agricultural exports to Tunisia are bulk grains and oilseeds.
This report contains an unofficial translation of Tunisia's Order approving the Tunisian standard for maximum residue limits of pesticides (NT 117.03), which references its technical conformity....
This report contains an unofficial translation of the Order that cancelled the compulsory nature of Tunisian standards in the food industry sector, including those related to analyses and tests....
This report contains an unofficial translation of Tunisia's Decree No. 94-1742, as amended, fixing the list of products excluded from the regime of freedom of foreign trade.
This report contains an unofficial translation of Tunisia's draft law on food and feed safety, approved by the People's Assembly on February 12, 2019.
This report contains an unofficial translation of Tunisian Decree No. 2009-2200, fixing the list of regulated animal diseases and general measures applicable to counter them.
Effective December 21, 2018, Tunisia repealed its ban on import financing for select imported consumer goods it deemed as “non-essential,” which earlier came into effect October 27, 2017....
This report contains an unofficial translation of an instruction from the Ministry of Commerce to the Director General for Customs, instructing Customs to begin implementing additional technical....
Tunisia bans the import of several plants and plant products from some or all countries, including but not limited to citrus, dates, apples, pears, alfalfa, clover, potatoes, peaches and olives.
Tunisia remains primarily a bulk commodity market for U.S. corn and soybean products.
Effective October 27, Tunisian banks stopped financing the importation of non-essential consumer products, adversely impacting between $5-30 million of U.S. food and agricultural sales.
Following record production in 2016/17, Tunisia citrus faces lingering constraints to capture value added processing and export markets. France remains the largest export market for Tunisia citrus....