I guess you are a bit confused here because you’re expecting one of the three main types of conditionals.
“If you have a trip to China planned, the Federal Government urges you to make other arrangements for the time being” - automatic result following from another possible future action. Or an expression of the immediacy
“If you have a trip to China planned, the Federal Government will urge you to make other arrangements for the time being” - this conditional type just expresses an open condition whether you have a planned trip or not and the result. (Or whenever you
jave a trip planned.)
“if you had a trip to China planned, the Federal Government would be urging you to make other arrangements for the time being” - expresses a theoretical condition where you do not have a trip planned at present. That’s all about possibility and probability.
”if you’d had a trip to China planned, the Federal Government would have been urging you to make other arrangements for the time being” - referring to an unreal/imaginary past action/situation. Or it would be better to say - chances which you haven’t taken.
In your sentence it’s too straightforward. If in the past you had a trip planned then you’ve got an action enforced by the Federal Government.
The mixture of a 0 conditional type but based not on the possible future actions but the past actions, and a result
So, yeah! Your sentence makes some sense to me