Effective November 22, 2019, the import of fresh tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum), peppers (Capsicum spp.), and related propagative material will be restricted to prevent the spread of tomato brown rugose fruit virus into the United States. This virus is easily spread through the use of contaminated tools, hands, and plant-to-plant contact.
The US Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) issued a federal order last week, which will increase US Customs and Border Protection’s inspections on these goods. The restrictions affect fruit, plants, seed lots, and transplants from all countries, including consignments from Mexico, Canada, Israel, and the Netherlands.
Shipments of these goods must be accompanied by a Phytosanitary Certificate or Re-Export Phytosanitary Certificate with an additional declaration certifying that the lots fulfill either of the following requirements prior to import.
Consignments of fresh tomatoes and peppers from Canada, Mexico, Israel, and the Netherlands must be accompanied by one of the following documents:
Additional information is available from CBP’s November 18th release or by contacting Deringer’s Compliance Department.