Food quality and safety in China has improved
significantly as the country completes the establishment of market
access systems for food products.
By the end of 2006, China will have completed market
access systems for 525 kinds of food products in 28 categories,
according to the annual conference of the General Administration of
Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine
yesterday.
The establishment of the systems began 2002 with the
five categories of grain, salt, sauce, vinegar and edible oil. It
was followed by 10 categories consisting principally of meat and
dairy products, and 13 categories encompassing tea, wine, and egg
products.
To date, more than 80,000 food enterprises have
acquired market access permit certificates. Next year the
administration will further create access systems for cosmetics and
food-related products such as packaging and cooking
utensils.
"With the completion of the systems, the quality of
food products in China has been much improved, and food processing
industries have been effectively regulated," Li said.
The administration cancels production qualifications
of between 10 and 20 enterprises monthly for various quality
defects.
In another development, an archives record system for
additives utilised by food processing enterprises, will come online
early next year.
"Enterprises will have to make it public what
additives they are using and what they are not," according to Wu
Jianping, director of food production and supervision of the
administration. "The archives will upgrade food production safety
from the source," he said.
This year, China has been confronted with food safety
problems, especially due to poisonous additives. Recent cases
include carcinogenic mandarin and turbot fish, and ducks and hens
that were fed cancer-causing Sudan Red dye to turn their yolks
red.
"Another importance of the archives system is that it
will be able to differentiate between guilty and innocent food
producers," Wu said. "Such a record system will at least salvage
the innocent ones."
Food safety supervision is especially difficult on the
Chinese mainland due to the presence of over 350,000 small food
processing outlets with less than 10 staff each.
With backward facilities and poorly trained staff, the
outlets usually fail to reach the required quality standards, and
has increased supervision difficulty, Li said.
In northern Shaanxi Province, local governments have sent
food quality supervision cadres to patrol streets in the urban and
rural areas.
"Only through regionalizing and strengthening
supervision responsibilities can we solve these issues," Wu
said.
China has also made
remarkable achievements in improving the quality of food products
for export. Statistics show that Chinese enterprises made a 20
percent year-on-year increase in food exports at the end of last
month.
(China Daily December 19,
2006)
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