Retaliatory tariffs on pork concern Oklahoma producers, who export much of their pork. [Oklahoman archive photo]

In President Donald Trump's multinational trade war, an estimated $208 million worth of Oklahoma's exports are in danger because of retaliatory tariffs.

Exports of meat — pork in particular — iron and steel pipes, and cotton are especially at risk in the state, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Oklahoma jobs — 401,000 of them — are supported by trade.

“We're certainly concerned,” said Roy Lee Lindsey, executive director of the Oklahoma Pork Council. “We are an industry that's growing ... rapidly, not just here in Oklahoma but across the country. And that growth is all predicated on exports.”

Lindsey said pork farmers in May exported 27.5 percent of their product, so anything that limits export sales is bad for business.