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AFIA applauds safer Chinese feed

14-12-2007 | |
AFIA applauds safer Chinese feed

American Feed Industry Association (AFIA) President Joel Newman extended congratulations to Chinese and US officials responsible for signing a historic agreement this week aimed at enhancing the quality of feed and food shipped here from China.

Six months in the making, the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) signed on Dec.
11, 2007 will result in a legally binding set of commitments from
China.

Newman said, “This agreement is a major step toward realizing the
feed safety objectives of the Association.”

The MOA was signed in Beijing
in advance of the third session under the United States-China Strategic Economic
Dialogue.

It provides for a bilateral mechanism to ensure the safety of
feed and food products shipped to the US from China. Implementation will begin
with a select set of products, including pet foods and wheat and rice
gluten.

Key highlights

  • Chinese firms exporting to the US must
    register and submit to annual inspection to insure the products meet FDA
    standards.

  • AQSIQ (Administration of Quality, Supervision, Inspection and
    Quarantine) will notify FDA (Federal Drug Administration) of all firms that fail
    inspections or discontinue registration.

  • AQSIQ will implement a tracing and
    tracking system from production of raw materials to export of finished
    product.

  • AQSIQ will implement a statistical based sampling program of products
    for export.

  • Certified Chinese products will be issued a certificate with a unique
    number that China will also supply to FDA.

  • FDA will develop a system to notify
    China of non-registered products or those without certificates arriving at US
    ports.

  • Each country will mutually notify the other within 48 hours of
    contamination incidents.

  • FDA will be given greater access to Chinese facilities
    for inspection.

  • An AQSIQ/FDA Working Group will be established to
    implement the agreement.

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