GUATEMALA CITY & SAN SALVADOR – Earlier this week, while one USA Rice delegation visited with importers of U.S. rice in Honduras (see
USA Rice Daily, March 12, 2026), another delegation visited Guatemala and El Salvador’s capital cities for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) sixth Trade Reciprocity for U.S. Manufacturers and Producers (TRUMP) mission, led by USDA Under Secretary for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs Luke Lindberg.
TRUMP missions are intended to be rapid-response trade missions designed to immediately leverage new reciprocal trade deals secured by the administration, such as those with Guatemala and El Salvador (see
USA Rice Daily, January 29, 2026). During this trip, U.S. rice industry representatives met with government officials and a range of private sector rice importers in both markets with the participation of USDA political leadership.
“The trade mission provided us a great opportunity to get into Guatemala and El Salvador at a time when our governments have strong partnerships and the receptivity to U.S. products and to Americans couldn’t be higher,” said Arkansas rice farmer Dow Brantley, the current chair of Arkansas Rice, who traveled with the U.S. delegation. “There is certainly demand for rice in both markets and despite continued concerns about milling yields, quality, and price, I think we can find ways to grow back our market share in the future.”
In addition to meeting with importers from the private sector, stops in both cities included tours of large supermarket chains where both USA Rice and the U.S. Rice Producers Association spotlighted in-store promotions for U.S.-origin rice (see
USA Rice Daily, April 20, 2022).
“We appreciate Under Secretary Lindberg’s presence on this mission and believe it provided a great backdrop for discussions around resolving the issue of Asian rice entering El Salvador duty-free, fraudulently being labeled ‘Product of USA,’ and then being re-exported duty-free throughout Central America,” said USA Rice President & CEO Peter Bachmann. “We look forward to continuing to work on that issue with the USDA and the full U.S. government team over the coming weeks.”
The U.S. almost exclusively exports paddy rice to both Guatemala and El Salvador, both of which enter duty-free under the terms of the Central America-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (referred to as CAFTA-DR).
Since 2020, annual U.S. exports to Guatemala have ranged from between $27 million and $61 million, shipping as much as 160,000 metric tons in 2024. Exports to El Salvador for the same timeframe have ranged from $12 million to $27 million, shipping as much as 86,000 metric tons in 2021. Both markets are subject to competition from South American rice producers.