BEIJING, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- The Information Office
of the State Council published a white paper titled "China's food quality and
safety" here Friday. Following is the full text:
China's food quality and safety
Information Office of the State Council of the
People's Republic of China
August 2007, Beijing
The quality and safety of food is a major benchmark
of the economic development and people's living conditions of a country.
Adhering to the people-oriented approach, the Chinese government has always
attached great importance to food quality and safety. Moreover, sticking to the
principle of nipping problems in the bud, it has built and improved a
supervisory system and mechanism for food safety, strengthened legislation and
the setting of relevant standards, exercised strict quality control regarding
food, actively promoted international exchanges and cooperation in this respect,
and has greatly raised public awareness of food safety. Thanks to such efforts,
the overall level of food quality in China is being steadily enhanced, the
situation of food safety is continuously improving, and the order in food
production and operation have markedly turned for the better.
I. Food Production and Food Quality
1. The Quality and Safety Level of Processed
Food Is Steadily Improving
(1) Rapid and Sound Development of the
Food-processing Industry
In recent years, China's food industry has maintained
fast and sound growth, with a steady increase in economic benefits. Foodstuffs
can be classified by their raw materials and processing techniques into 525
kinds in 28 categories: processed grain products; edible oil, fat and fat
products; seasonings; meat products; dairy products; soft drinks; convenient
food; biscuits; canned food; iced drinks; fast-frozen food; potato and dilated
food; candies (including chocolate and chocolate products); tea; alcoholic
beverages; vegetable products; fruit products; roasted seeds and nuts; egg
products; cocoa and bakery coffee products; sugar; processed aquatic products;
starch and starch products; pastries; bean products; bee products; special diet
food, and others. At present, China has 448,000 enterprises engaged in foodstuff
production and processing. Among them, 26,000 enterprises of designated scale
occupy 72 percent of the market, taking the leading role in terms of output and
sales revenue; 69,000 are enterprises not up to the designated scale and those
with more than ten employees, taking up a market share of 18.7 percent; and
353,000 are small businesses or workshops with fewer than ten employees, with a
market share of 9.3 percent.
Statistics show that, in 2006, industrial food
enterprises of designated scale generated 2,158.695 billion yuan of output value
(excluding tobacco), accounting for 6.8 percent of the national industrial
output value, and up 23.5 percent year on year. The average annual industrial
added value and profit of processing enterprises of grain, oil, meat and dairy
products all exceeded 20percent. The output of major foodstuffs in 2006 were:
wheat flour, 51.93 million tons; edible vegetable oil, 19.855 million tons;
fresh frozen meat, 11.125 million tons; dairy products, 14.596 million tons;
beer, 35.152 million kl; and soft drinks, 42.198 million tons. These figures
show rises of 28.2 percent, 17.5 percent, 24.0 percent, 23.5 percent, 14.7
percent and 21.5 percent year on year, respectively. In the first six months of
2007, the accumulated output value of the food industry amounted to
1,281.62billion yuan, up 29.9 percent as compared with the corresponding period
last year. The output of beer, edible oil, soft drinks and gourmet powder led
the world.
At present, the development of China's food industry
displays the following features:
One, the processing techniques and equipment of some
food enterprises reach or approach the advanced international level. Large meat,
dairy product, beverage and beer producers all have world first-class production
and testing facilities, which guarantees the quality of their products. The
development and application of such key processing techniques as
membrane-separation technology, physical property modification, cold-aseptic
filling, concentration and cold processing has narrowed China's gap with the
world advanced level in terms of processing technology and equipment.
Two, quality control of the enterprises has become
more scientific and standard. So far, 107,000 food producers have obtained
market access permits regarding quality and safety, and 2,675 have been granted
hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) certificates.
Three, the structure of products is being improved to
cater to the increasingly diverse demands of consumers. The proportion of
intensively or deeply processed foodstuffs to the total output of foodstuffs
keeps increasing. For instance, liquid dairies now account for more than 85
percent of the total output of dairy products; colas no longer dominate the
market, as a result of the mushrooming of packed drinking water and fruit,
vegetable and tea drinks; special flour above second grade accounts for 65
percent of the total output of wheat flour; standard rice above first grade
accounts for 88 percent of the total output of rice, and special rice for 33.9
percent of the total output of rice; and Grades I and II oil (salad oil and
quality culinary oil according to previous national standards) accounts for 58.5
percent of the total output of edible vegetable oil.
(2) Continuous Improvement of Food Quality
One, the acceptance rate of foodstuffs on the whole
is steadily rising. The rate was 77.9 percent in the 2006 national foodstuffs
sample survey, and it rose to 85.1 percent in a similar survey in the first half
of 2007. The level of food quality and safety remains stable, with a gradual
upturn.
Two, the quality of food produced nationwide is
improving. In the first half of 2007, the 31 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities directly under the Central Government on the mainland of China
reported an average 89.2-percent acceptance rate of foodstuffs, and the figure
in 14 of them surpassed 90 percent.
Three, the quality of food in key sectors is fairly
high. Thanks to the country's endeavors to improve the work of food producers
and processors, the quality of 525 kinds of foodstuffs in 28 categories has been
enhanced to various degrees, with remarkable progress in the quality of food
with a large daily consumption. According to statistics, the ten foodstuffs with
the largest consumption are edible oil, fat and fat products; alcoholic
beverages; aquatic products; processed grain products; soft drinks; meat
products; dairy products; seasonings; starch and starch products; and sugar. In
the first half of 2007, sample surveys showed a 90-percent or higher acceptance
rate of all the above ten foodstuffs except aquatic products, whose acceptance
rate was 85 percent. That of meat products was 97.6 percent.
(3) Quality Food Dominating the Market
Along with the development of the food industry, the
scale of food producers keeps growing, production is becoming more concentrated,
and the quality of foodstuffs of large and medium-sized producers is sound. In
2006, the top 100 revenue earners held 24.9 percent of the total sales of the
food industry; the top ten dairy producers generated 54.7 percent of the total
revenue of the dairy industry; the top ten soft-drink producers generated 39.5
percent of the total output of that industry; the top ten sugar makers produced
43.6 percent of the total output of the sugar industry; the top 50 meat
producers accounted for 70 percent of that industry in terms of production
capacity and sales; the eight beer brewery groups, each with a production
capacity of over one million kl, produced 57 percent of the national beer
output; the ten largest wineries produced 62.1 percent of the national output;
and the three largest instant noodle producers occupied 76 percent of the
Chinese market.
2. The Quality and Safety of Agricultural
Products Is Steadily Improving
(1) Fast Growth of High-quality and Safe Brands
Quality agricultural products are steadily expanding
their market. Agricultural standardization has been notably enhanced, which
increases farmers' income and changes their farming patterns. Hazard-free, green
and organic products make up 90 percent of all agricultural-product exports.
Over the past five years, the export of green food has shot up 40 percent
annually, and has been accepted by over 40 of China's trading partners. So far,
China has developed 28,600 kinds of hazard-free agricultural products, and set
up 24,600 hazard-free production bases with a total area of 21.07 million
hectares. Five thousand three hundred and fifteen Chinese enterprises use the
green food logo on their 14,339 kinds of products totaling 72 million tons and
grown on 10 million hectares of land. In addition, 600 producers use the organic
food logo on their 2,647 kinds of products totaling 19.56 million tons and grown
on 3.11 million hectares of land. Altogether, there are 539 state-level
agricultural demonstration zones, 100 demonstration counties (farms) and nearly
3,500 provincial-level demonstration zones, with a combined growing area
exceeding 33.33 million hectares.
(2) Acceptance Rate of Agricultural Products Rising
Continuously
Inspections in the first half of 2007 showed that the
average acceptance rate regarding pesticide residues in vegetables was 93.6
percent; those regarding clenbuterol hydrochloride contamination and sulfa drug
residues in livestock products was 98.8 percent and 99.0 percent respectively;
and that regarding chloromycetin in aquatic products was 99.6 percent, of
nitrofuran 91.4 percent, and of pesticide residue over 95 percent in sample
surveys done at production bases.
3. The Quality of Imported and Exported
Foodstuffs Stays High
China is a large importer and exporter of foodstuffs,
with the amount of each growing steadily in recent years. The import and export
volume in 2006 totaled US$40.448 billion-worth (excluding wheat, corn and
soybean, same below), up 21.45 percent year on year.
(1) Safety of Export Food Guaranteed
In 2006, China exported 24.173 million tons of food,
worth US$26.659 billion, up 13.29 percent and 16.0 percent year on year,
respectively. The top ten varieties in terms of export value were aquatic
products, processed aquatic products, vegetables, canned food, juices and
drinks, processed grain products, seasonings, poultry products, alcoholic
beverages, and livestock meat and chopped entrails.
Foodstuffs of the mainland of China have been
exported to more than 200 countries and regions, of which the top ten in terms
of trade volume are Japan, the US, the ROK, Hong Kong, Russia, Germany,
Malaysia, Holland, Indonesia and the UK.
For many years, over 99 percent of China's exported
foodstuffs have been up to standard. In 2006 and the first half of 2007, China
exported to the US some 94,000 batches and 55,000 batches of foodstuffs,
respectively, and 752 batches and 477 batches of each were found by the US to be
substandard, making the acceptance rate99.2 percent and 99.1 percent,
respectively. In the case of the EU, the figures were 91,000 batches and 62,000
batches, with 91 batches and 135 batches found by the EU to be substandard,
making the acceptance rate 99.9 percent and 99.8 percent, respectively. On July
20, 2007, the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan, the largest
importer of Chinese food, released an examination report on food imported from
China in 2006, which showed that Japan conducted more sample surveys on Chinese
food (15.7 percent) than on food from anywhere else, but Chinese food had the
highest acceptance rate (99.42 percent), followed by that imported from the EU
(99.38 percent) and the US (98.69 percent). The mainland of China is a major
supplier of food for the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. Two large food
sample surveys conducted by Hong Kong's Food and Environmental Hygiene
Department in the first half of 2007 showed that the acceptance rate stood
at99.2 percent and 99.6 percent, respectively.
(2) Quality of Imported Food Stable
In 2006, China imported 20.273 million tons of food,
worth US$13.396 billion, up 37.94 percent and 25.11 percent year on year,
respectively. The top ten varieties in terms of import value were vegetable oil,
aquatic products, cereals, sugar, dairy products, alcoholic beverages, tobacco
and associated products, poultry and chopped entrails, oil crops, and processed
grain products.
China imports foodstuffs from 143 countries and
regions, and the top ten in terms of trade value are Malaysia, Russia, the US,
Indonesia, Argentina, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil and France.
For many years, the quality of food China imports has
been fairly stable, and no serious hazard has been caused by imported food.
During the period from 2004 to the first half of 2007, the acceptance rate of
imported food, according to statistics released by the ports of entry, were
99.29 percent (2004), 99.46 percent (2005), 99.11 percent (2006) and 99.29
percent (first half of 2007), respectively.
II. Food Safety Regulatory System and
Work
To ensure food safety, the Chinese government adheres
to the principle of giving priority to prevention and control at its root by
monitoring and controlling the whole process, and has formed a regulatory format
in which the local governments take the responsibility, related departments
provide guidance and conduct coordination, and different sectors make concerted
efforts under the unified national leadership. In response to the circumstances
in China, the State Council issued the Decision on Further Strengthening Food
Safety Supervision in 2004, according to which one monitoring link is supervised
by one department; sectional supervision is adopted as the main means while
supervision of different varieties as the supplementary means, making clearer
the functions and responsibilities of the food safety supervisory departments.
The Decision divided food safety supervision into four links, managed by the
departments of agriculture, quality supervision and inspection, industry and
commerce, and health, respectively. The production of primary agricultural
products is supervised by the agriculture department, the quality and daily
hygiene supervision of food processing is overseen by the quality supervision
and inspection department, supervision of food circulation and distribution is
done by the department of industry and commerce, and that of the catering
industry and canteens is taken care of by the health department. The integrated
food-safety supervision and coordination, and investigation of and penalties
imposed for major incidents in this regard are the responsibility of the
department of food and drug administration, while imported and exported
agricultural products and other foodstuffs are supervised by the quality
supervision and inspection department. In this way, there is a strict, complete
regulatory system for food safety supervision in which the departments concerned
work in close cooperation, with clearly defined functions and responsibilities.
As it is a prolonged and arduous task to strengthen
food safety control, a regulatory system and a lasting efficiency mechanism
should be established and improved, and planned with consideration given to both
present and future needs to deal with both the symptoms and root causes of food
safety problems, especially the latter.
The Chinese government stresses food safety from the
source, improvement of the related basic regulatory systems, and strengthening
of food safety supervision.
1. Intensifying Supervision on the Quality
and Safety of Agricultural Products
In 2001, China started to implement the Hazard-free
Food Action Plan, focusing on the control of residue of high-toxic pesticides in
vegetables and clenbuterol hydrochloride contamination in livestock products, to
address the most concerned problems of illegal use of high-toxic pesticide and
veterinary medicines, as well as violations of residue standards. The Plan
stipulates a complete supervisory process from farmland to market by emphasizing
the three key aspects of materials used in farming, production and market
excess. By carrying out regular monitoring and inspection, the Plan aims at
enhancing people's awareness of food quality and safety, ensuring management
responsibility, and improving the levels of management and quality and safety of
agricultural products by means of standardization. Today, the system for
securing the quality and safety of agricultural products is improving, with
steadily strengthened supervisory capacity and notable progress in agricultural
standardization, leading to the formation of a work mechanism integrating
service, management, supervision, penalty and emergency response, to ensure the
quality and safety of agricultural products.
2. Establishing and Strictly Implementing
Market Access Systems for Food Quality and Safety
The food quality and safety market access systems
established by the Chinese government in 2001 comprise three major ones. One,
the production license system, which requires that food-processing enterprises
cannot produce and market their products without having the capability to
control the source materials' quality, and the adequate conditions to ensure
food quality and safety in terms of production equipment, technological flow,
product standardization, testing equipment and capability, environment, quality
control, storage and transportation, packaging and labeling, and production
staff. Enterprises can produce and sell food only after obtaining a food
production license. Two, the compulsory inspection system, which means that
enterprises have the legal obligation to ensure that their food products pass
quality inspection before entering the market. Three, the market access labeling
system, i.e., enterprises are required to put on food products the QS label,
guaranteeing their quality and safety. Following the principle of phased
implementation, by the end of June 2007, some 107,000 food production licenses
had been issued to enterprises, which took up over 90 percent of the market of
their trades. Meanwhile, supervision has been strengthened over enterprises with
food production licenses. By the end of June 2007,1,276 food production licenses
had been withdrawn, cancelled, revoked or nullified for substandard food
products.
In pace with the growing number of enterprises
obtaining the license, the General Administration of Quality Supervision,
Inspection and Quarantine has released lists of such enterprises, making clear
that producers without the license and products without the QS label must not
enter the market, and warning consumers not to use such products.
3. Intensifying State Supervision by Sample
Survey for Food Quality
The Chinese government carries out a food supervision
and inspection system mainly by means of sample survey. Since it was set up in
1985, the system has been strengthened and become more focused to enhance its
efficiency. In recent years, daily-consumption food items, such as dairy
products, meat products, tea, beverages, grain and edible oil, have become the
major targets of sample surveys, especially those produced in workshops and
enterprises located in concentrated food-producing areas. Special attention has
been given to the hygienic indices of microorganisms, additives and heavy metals
in food, and to follow-up inspections of small enterprises with unstable product
quality. By increasing sample survey frequency and coverage, the goal of
rectifying producers of the same type of food by means of sample survey has been
by and large met. The state supervisory sample surveys were carried out on
11,104 batches of foodstuffs produced by 7,880 enterprises from 2006 to June
2007. Meanwhile, greater efforts have been made to rectify and punish
enterprises turning out substandard products, and to set things straight by
means of the following: First, strictly implementing the public announcement
system. Three hundred and fifty-five batches of food with serious quality
problems produced by 355 enterprises were found in sample surveys and publicly
announced. At the same time, publicity is given to good enterprises, quality
products and sound brands. Two hundred and forty products winning the title of
"Famous Chinese Brand" and 548 freed-from-inspection products have become
popular among consumers. Second, strictly carrying out the rectification system.
Enterprises with substandard products are urged to rectify themselves strictly,
to be examined again in due course. If problems persist, they will be ordered to
stop production for an overhaul. If they still cannot pass the inspection after
the overhaul, their business licenses will be revoked. Third, strictly
implementing the penalty system. Producers who mix impurities or imitations with
their products, or pass fake or defective products off as genuine ones will be
ordered to stop production, and their products be confiscated. Legal liabilities
will be imposed in serious cases by the judicial organs.
4. Intensifying Rectification of Food
Workshops
Regional differences and disparities between urban
and rural areas in China make the supervision of food workshops a prolonged and
arduous task. At present, food workshops with fewer than ten employees are the
ones that pose the most difficult problem for ensuring food quality and safety.
For workshops engaged in traditional, low-risk food processing, the government
sticks to the principle of supervision and standardization while giving guidance
to such workshops for consumers' convenience. On the one hand, the government
has tried to upgrade them to the market-access requirements by means of
shutdown, stoppage of production, merging or changing line of business; on the
other, more stringent supervisory measures have been taken to prevent food
safety accidents. In recent years, supervision of workshops and small
enterprises has been conducted mainly in four aspects: One, transformation of
basic work conditions. Workshops cannot start production without meeting the
requirements. Two, restrictions on market scope. Food products processed by such
small workshops are not allowed to sell outside the administrative areas of
townships or towns in which they are located, not allowed to enter shopping
centers and supermarkets. Three, restrictions on food packaging. Before
obtaining a market access permit, food products from the workshops are not
allowed to have marketing package, so that they cannot enter the market
disguised as licensed goods. Four, public undertaking. Food workshops must
undertake to the public that they do not use any non-food materials, misuse
additives, use recycled food, send their products to shopping centers or
supermarkets, or market their products beyond the approved region, and guarantee
that their food products meet the basic safety and hygienic standards. After
such rectifications, the average acceptance rate in sample surveys of food
workshops rose to 70.4 percent in 2006. By the end of June 2007, 5,631 workshops
had been closed down, 8,814 had been made to suspend production, and 5,385 had
reached the requirements after rectification.
5. Promoting the Responsibility System for
Regional Food Safety Control
The responsibility system for regional food safety
control mainly comprises the following aspects. First, to have specified persons
responsible for specified regions and enterprises. The system requires that food
safety inspectors of the quality supervision and inspection department go to the
townships to supervise the food-processing enterprises; township government
coordinators assist the inspectors in supervising food quality and safety; and
local reporters bring to attention anything illegal regarding food quality and
safety. The number of inspectors, coordinators and local reporters must be
fixed, their duties defined, and their working areas and inspecting enterprises
designated. Second, the system requires "three enters" and "four graphs." The
former refers to entering villages, households and enterprises to find out their
working conditions and set up files of food producers and processors; the latter
refers to drawing up a graph showing dynamic changes in enterprises, a graph
showing the distribution of food producers and processors, a graph showing the
implementation of supervisory duties, and a graph giving food safety
precautions, so as to carry out proactive monitoring and control. Third, the
system requires local governments to sign documents of responsibility,
enterprises to sign letters of undertaking, and quality supervision and
inspection departments to submit regular food safety reports.
By the end of June 2007, a total of 16,030
food-safety supervision regions had been set up, 25,346 full-time food-safety
inspectors had been put to work, 72,474 local government coordinators had been
appointed, and 106,573 food-safety reporters had been recruited in 31 provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the Central Government. In
2006, the quality supervision and inspection departments at various levels made
900,000 inspections of food producing and processing enterprises.
6. Stepping up Supervision of the Food
Circulation Sector
The "Three Green Projects" have been vigorously
promoted in China, advocating "green consumption, green markets and green
channels." The government encourages modern modes of organization and management
for circulation, positively supports the development of chain management and
logistics provision; urges marketing enterprises to examine materials before
accepting them, check business licenses, require invoices for purchases, keep
accounts of transactions and honor their undertakings for food quality, as well
as promotes market managers' food quality responsibility system; implements
market inspection system in an all-around way; improves the food quality
monitoring system, and strictly implements the system that substandard food must
be withdrawn from the market and destroyed and made known to the public;
strengthens administration over butchering of livestock and fowls, breaks down
regional barriers and encourages the nationwide circulation of high-quality
foodstuffs with good credit standing and prestigious brand names; improves food
processing, circulation and service systems in communities; strengthens the
management of the use of genuine food safety labels and standard packaging, and
concentrates efforts to crack down on printing of fake packaging, labels and
trademarks.
7. Intensifying Supervision of Food Safety in Catering Industry
Hygiene in the catering industry is vital for food
safety. In this regard, the Chinese government has primarily done the following:
One, it has intensified supervision on hygiene in the catering industry,
promulgated and put into effect the Hygienic Standards for the Catering Industry
and Group Food Service Providers, adopted a quantified and classified
supervisory system for food hygiene management, and strengthened supervision on
each link of the catering industry. Two, it has urged the catering industry and
canteens to implement the quantified and classified supervisory system for food
hygiene management in an all-around way, improved and strengthened monitoring of
food contamination and building of a monitoring system on diseases caused by
contaminated food. Three, it has intensified crackdown on activities in
violation of food safety law, investigated and dealt with serious cases and
timely made them known to the public. In 2006, the health departments inspected
2.04 million catering entities of various types and school canteens, dealt with
45,000 cases of illegal food processing and sale and closed down 25,000 food
processors and sellers that had been operating without hygiene permits. Four, it
has strengthened efforts on hygienic work in schools, directed and carried out
special inspections on food and drinking water hygiene, and prevention and
treatment of contagious diseases in schools all over the country, as well as
prevention of food poisoning and the spread of communicable intestinal diseases.
Five, it has conducted food-related jeopardy assessment and issued early
warnings for food safety problems on a scientific basis and provided food
assessment information.
8. Carrying out Rectification in Respect of
Food Quality and Safety in an All-around Way
In order to crack down on the spread of counterfeit
and shoddy foodstuffs in certain regions, special comprehensive rectification
campaigns were launched in these regions for food quality and safety. The
Chinese government has conducted a special project involving hundreds of
regions, thousands of townships and tens of thousands of food producers and
processors. Targeting key regions, food processing venues and households and
their products, the project has resolved the regional problem of producing and
selling fake and inferior goods by establishing a food safety monitoring
network, stepping up efforts in building up the technological forces such as
standardization and monitoring technology, improving technical services for
enterprises, promoting the setting up of food industry associations, and
intensifying law enforcement and making more stringent efforts to crack down on
the production and sale of counterfeit and faulty food. Meanwhile, the
departments of industry and commerce as well as quality supervision and
inspection keep intensifying law enforcement and, with focus on food quality and
safety, direct and conduct special law enforcement actions against activities in
producing and processing counterfeit food-related items at the source, strictly
crack down on illegal activities such as production of food with non-food
materials and misuse of additives in food, as well as food producers with
neither a business license nor food-processing permit. In 2006, the quality
supervision and inspection departments handled 49,000 illegal operations in this
field, confiscating counterfeit and shoddy foodstuffs worth 450 million yuan. In
the same year, the departments of industry and commerce sent 5.6 million
person/times for law enforcement and inspected 16,000 key food markets and 10.4
million food operating business/times, closed down 151,800 unlicensed
businesses, revoked4,629 business licenses, investigated and dealt with 68,000
cases of production and sale of counterfeit and shoddy food, of which 48cases
were referred to the relevant judicial organs, and ordered 15,500 tons of
substandard foodstuffs off the market.
9. Beefing up the Construction of a
Risk-warning and Emergency-response System
The Chinese government has established a nationwide
quick risk warning and responding system in respect of food safety, actively
conducted risk monitoring and control in food production, processing,
circulation and consumption, and preliminarily realized the early discovery,
early warning, early control and early treatment of food-safety problems through
efficient collection and analysis of information on food safety. It has also
established a rapid and efficient response mechanism covering the collection and
analysis of risk-related information, issuing warnings and rapid responses so
that it is possible to provide prompt reports, take swift action, make accurate
judgment and mete out appropriate measures.
10. Establishing and Improving a Food Recall
System
This system comprises two aspects: active recall and
instructed recall. The system stipulates that it is the responsibility of food
producing and processing enterprises to recall their products if necessary,
requires that food producers should instantly put a halt to the production and
selling of their products if they suspect any safety risk in their food
products, and take the initiative to recall such food products. Producers who
purposely conceal food hazards or do not perform their recall obligations, or
whose faulty production has extended such hazards or made them recur, will be
instructed to recall their products. In recent years, in conducting food sample
surveys and law enforcement, the General Administration of Quality Supervision,
Inspection and Quarantine has become more stringent in demanding food recall
when major food-safety hazards, such as pathogenic bacteria, chemical pollutant
or non-food materials, are found in food products. Toward those food producing
enterprises causing serious consequences, the Administration has revoked their
licenses, thus reducing hazards that might be caused by unsafe food and
safeguarding the health and safety of consumers.
11. Improving the Food Safety Credit
System
The Chinese government pays great attention to the
construction of the credit system for food safety, and has set up the
preliminary credit records for food-producing enterprises, as well as a system
to publicize the honor rolls and blacklists of food producers and processors.
Meanwhile, the functions of chambers of commerce and
trade associations have been brought into full play to promote self-discipline
in the food industry. By giving backing to excellent and competent enterprises,
the government supports and helps good and strong enterprises by legislative,
administrative and economic means to create an honest environment for food
safety, and to enhance people's awareness of honesty in this regard. It has made
great efforts in gradual improvement of this mechanism for food safety, and
given full scope to its role in regulating, guiding and supervising food safety.
It has built up files of credit records of food safety and promoted classified
credit monitoring in the food industry. Emphasis is laid on the establishment of
a registration and information system and a classified database of credit
records of food producers and sellers, which collects information on food
producers' and sellers' market access, food-safety control, and consumers'
complaints and reports, to ensure an effective control based on adequate
information. In recent years, the latest network technology has been used for
this purpose, so that consumers may timely, easily, quickly and effectively
distinguish counterfeits from genuine ones, which greatly helps safeguard
consumers' interests, discourages the production and sale of fake foodstuffs and
promotes honesty among enterprises in this industry.
Over the years, the continuous growth of the food
industry in terms of variety and quantity as well as the improvement of quality
have helped satisfy the people's ever-increasing consumption demands, raised
their living standard and promoted national economic development. However, the
Chinese government is well aware that there are still problems with food safety,
owing to the country's limited socio-economic development. In the days to come,
penalties will be focused on those who produce shoddy products or products
containing inferior materials or impurities, palm off counterfeits as genuine
ones, process foodstuff with non-food or moldy materials, produce foodstuff in
disregard of required standards and misuse additives in foodstuff, so as to
continuously guarantee food safety and quality.
III. Supervision of Imported and Exported
Food
1. Supervision of Imported Food
Exploration and practice over the years have enabled
China to set up a complete framework of food quality and safety supervisory
system and guarantee measures to ensure the safety of imported food.
-- Scientific risk management system. According to
the WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
(SPS) and common international practice, the Chinese government adopts an
inspection and quarantine entry system based on risk management for high-risk
imported food, such as meat and vegetable, which includes: making a risk
analysis on the high-risk food that the exporting country applies to export to
China; signing an inspection and quarantine agreement with the exporting country
on food involving acceptable risks; carrying out hygiene registration for
foreign food enterprises; and quarantining, examining and approving the imported
food of animal and plant origin. If epidemic animal or plant diseases or severe
food safety problems occur in the exporting country, China shall take timely
risk management measures, including suspending food imports from that country.
-- Strict inspection and quarantine system. When
imported food arrives at the port of entry, the entry-exit inspection and
quarantine authorities carry out inspection and quarantine in accordance with
law, and approve the foodstuffs to be imported only if they meet the required
standards; and the customs house clears the imported food upon the strength of
the Customs Clearance List of Inward/Outward Goods as issued by the entry-exit
inspection and quarantine authorities. Only then can the food be sold in the
Chinese market. If safety or hygienic problems are found in the food when
inspected and quarantined, corresponding measures are immediately taken. In
2006, Chinese entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities altogether found
2,458 batches of foodstuffs not meeting the standards at ports of entry. In the
first half of 2007, some 896 were found, which were returned, destroyed or used
in other ways according to law. Thus is the safety of food imported for the
Chinese market assured.
-- Complete quality and safety supervisory system.
While carrying out inspection and quarantine in accordance with law, the
entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities pay special attention to
higher-risk food and problematic foodstuffs as found in the inspection and
quarantine at the ports of entry. The authorities promptly issue early warnings
of risks when finding imported food with serious problems or the same type of
imported food with repeated problems, and take such measures as increasing the
proportion of sample survey, adding more items for inspection, and suspending
import.
-- Strict system against illegal import. The General
Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine and the General
Administration of Customs have set up a cooperation mechanism to jointly fight
illegal food imports. In 2006, China signed with the European Union Commission
the Arrangement for Cooperation on Joint Prevention of Illegal Actions in the
Import and Export of Food, making it clear that the two sides will crack down on
such illegal activities as deception, undeclared carrying, illegal transit and
smuggling through exchanges of information, technological cooperation, mutual
visits of experts and special joint actions. In 2006 and the first half of 2007,
12,292 tons of illegally imported meat were seized.
¡¡¡¡2. Supervision of Exported Food
Following the principle of "prevention first,
supervision at the source, and control throughout the process," the Chinese
government has set up and improved an export-food safety management framework
composed of "one pattern and ten systems."
"One pattern" refers to the managerial pattern for
the production of export food -- "enterprise + base + standardization." This
pattern conforms to China's reality and the actual situation in the field of
export food, and thus is an important guarantee for the quality of such food.
Besides, it is the only way for enterprises to aim for scale and intensive
development in the international market. With unremitting efforts over many
years, China has basically put this pattern in place for major export food
items, especially high-risk foodstuffs such as meat, aquatic products and
vegetable.
The "ten systems" are: three for supervision at the
source -- the archiving management system for the inspection and quarantine of
planting and breeding bases, the epidemic disease monitoring system, and the
supervisory system for pesticide and veterinary medicine residue; three for
factory supervision -- the hygiene registration system, the classified
management system for enterprises, and the resident quarantine official system
for large enterprises producing high-risk food for export; three for product
supervision -- the legal inspection and quarantine system for export food, the
system of quality tracing and substandard products recalling, and the early risk
warning and quick response system; and one for credit building -- a red list and
a blacklist for food export enterprises.
-- Strengthening supervision of planting and breeding
at the source. To effectively control the risks of animal epidemics, plant
diseases and pesticide and veterinary medicine residue, and guarantee food
quality and safety and traceability at the source, the entry-exit inspection and
quarantine authorities adopt the archiving management system for the inspection
and quarantine of export food material bases with such risks. Only the raw
materials of planting and breeding bases with archiving approval can be used in
processed export food, and all the raw material bases with archiving approval
are publicized on the website of the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine. So far, 6,031 breeding farms and 380,000
hectares of planting bases have obtained such approval. For these bases, the
relevant agencies strengthen supervision, prevention and control of epidemic
diseases, exercise tight management of agricultural input materials, and enforce
a strict supervision system over pesticide and veterinary medicine residue, so
that these problems are brought under effective control. In recent years, bird
flu has been found in many places around the world, but none at the bases under
archiving management in China.
-- Strengthening supervision of food producing
enterprises. China has adopted a hygiene registration system for all enterprises
producing export food, and an enterprise has to be granted such registration
before engaging in the production of export food. So far, 12,714 enterprises
have been registered, among which 3,698 have passed the HACCP certification of
the entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities. The local entry-exit
inspection and quarantine authorities carry out routine supervision and
administration of the registered food producing and processing enterprises in a
unified way to ensure that the raw materials come from archived planting and
breeding bases, and that the production and processing meet the required
standards. As regards large enterprises producing or processing high-risk export
food such as meat, the entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities send
resident officials to supervise them when needed. The packaging of export food
should be labeled with traceable signs according to requirements, so as to
ensure the traceability of the products and recall of substandard products.
-- Strengthening inspection and quarantine before the
food is exported. As prescribed by Chinese laws, all food should meet the
standards set by the inspection and quarantine authorities before being
exported, and the customs houses at the ports of exit should clear the export
food upon the strength of the Customs Clearance List of Outward Goods issued by
the entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities. If it is demanded by the
importing country, the relevant entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities
should issue a hygiene certificate to prove that the food meets the required
standards, and enter on the certificate the name, address, number of hygiene
registration of the producing enterprise, date of production, date of export,
loading port and destination port. When the goods arrive at the port of exit,
the inspection and quarantine authorities at the port should examine the goods
again, making sure they are intact and conform to the information on the
certificate. All these measures guarantee the traceability of the food.
-- Strengthening the construction of the export
enterprise credit system. An export enterprise quality undertaking system and a
red list and blacklist system for export enterprises are implemented in a
comprehensive way, and efforts are being made to increase the awareness of the
persons primarily responsible for product quality and help enterprises to form a
mechanism of self-management, self-discipline and consciousness of operation in
good faith. Included on the List of Sound Enterprises are those with a complete
and effective control system, good faith, effective control over safety risks,
and a good reputation in the importing countries. Such enterprises are granted
favorable policy treatment. Enterprises with serious quality problems as
reported by the importing countries or regions, or which have avoided inspection
and quarantine or cheated the inspection and quarantine authorities are punished
in accordance with the law and included in the List of Unlawful Enterprises and
publicized on the Internet so as to enhance the self-disciplinary awareness of
enterprises producing export food. So far, 55 enterprises have been put on the
list.
Over the years, the departments of quality
supervision and inspection, trade, customs, industry and commerce, and taxation
have worked closely to promote the quality and safety level of food exported
from China and satisfy numerous Chinese and foreign customers with high-quality,
delicious and inexpensive foodstuffs. Yet, there are still a tiny number of
enterprises that disregard the law, regulations and standards of China and
importing countries and, by deception or fraud, avoid supervision by the
inspection and quarantine authorities, or export food by improper channels.
Consequently, some adulterated, counterfeit or shoddy foodstuffs have found
their way from China into foreign markets. The Chinese government is determined
to step up the fight against such activities and prevent substandard foodstuffs
from going overseas.
IV. Law Regime and Technological Guarantee
System for Food Safety
1.Food Safety Law Regime Gradually
Improved
China now has a complete law regime providing a sound
foundation and good environment for guaranteeing food safety, improving food
quality and regulating food imports and exports.
The specific laws in this regard include the Product
Quality Law, Standardization Law, Metrology Law, Law on the Protection of
Consumer Rights and Interests, Law on the Quality and Safety of Agricultural
Products, Criminal Law, Food Hygiene Law, Law on Import and Export Commodity
Inspection, Law on Animal and Plant Entry and Exit Quarantine, Frontier Health
and Quarantine Law and Law on Animal Disease Prevention.
The specific administrative regulations in this
regard include the Special Regulations of the State Council on Strengthening
Safety Supervision and Administration of Food and Other Products, Regulations of
the People's Republic of China on the Administration of Production Licenses for
Industrial Products, Regulations of the People's Republic of China on
Certification and Accreditation, Regulations for the Implementation of the Law
of the People's Republic of China on Import and Export Commodity Inspection,
Regulations for the Implementation of the Law of the People's Republic of China
on Animal and Plant Entry and Exit Quarantine, Administrative Regulations of the
People's Republic of China on Veterinary Medicine, Administrative Regulations of
the People's Republic of China on Pesticides, Regulations for the Implementation
of the Standardization Law of the People's Republic of China, Measures for
Investigating, Punishing and Banning Unlicensed Business Operations, Regulations
on the Administration of Feedstuffs and Feed Additives, Administrative
Regulations on the Safety of Genetically Modified Agricultural Organisms and
Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Import and Export of Endangered
Wild Fauna and Flora.
The specific departmental rules include the Detailed
Rules for the Implementation of the Measures for the Administration of the
Supervision of Quality and Safety of Food of Food Producing and Processing
Enterprises (Trial), Measures for the Implementation of the Regulations of the
People's Republic of China for the Administration of Production Licenses for
Industrial Products, Measures for the Hygiene Administration of Food Additives,
Measures for the Administration of Inspection and Quarantine of Entry and Exit
Meat Products, Measures for the Administration of Inspection and Quarantine of
Entry and Exit of Aquatic Products, Measures for the Administration of Food
Safety in the Circulation Sector, Measures for the Administration of the Safety
of Places of Origin of Agricultural Products, Measures for the Administration of
the Packaging and Marks of Agricultural Products and Regulations for the
Administration of Hygiene Registration of Export Food Production
Enterprises.
2.Construction of Food Quality and Safety
Standard System Gradually Strengthened
The Standardization Administration of the People's
Republic of China administers the country's food standardization work, while
relevant departments under the State Council are in charge of specific food
standardization work in respective sectors. The departments concerned are
responsible for drafting different national standards for food safety, while the
Standardization Administration initiates projects, examines them, marks the
serial numbers, gives formal approval and promulgates them. Now, a food quality
and safety standard system covering all categories, featuring a relatively
rational structure and being fairly complete, has taken initial shape in China.
Food safety standards cover the place of origin of agricultural products,
quality of irrigation water, rules for the rational use of materials put into
agriculture, rules and procedures for animal and plant quarantine, good
agricultural practices (GAP), standards of maximum amount of pesticides,
veterinary drugs, pollutants and spoilage organisms allowed in food, standards
for food additives and their use, hygiene standards for food packaging
materials, standards for special dietary food, standards for signs or labels on
food packages, standards for the management and control of the safe production
of food and standards for testing methods concerning food. These standards apply
to edible agricultural products and processed food, such as grain, oil, fruit
and vegetable, milk and dairy products, meat, poultry, eggs and related
products, aquatic products, soft and alcoholic drinks, condiments and infant
food; and cover each sector from food production, processing and distribution to
final consumption. So far, China has promulgated over 1,800 national standards
concerning food safety, and over 2,900 standards for the food industry, among
which 634 national standards are compulsory.
To solve such problems as food safety standards
overlapping each other and poorly organized, China has sorted out the over 1,800
national standards, over 2,500 industrial standards, over 7,000 local standards
and over 140,000 enterprise standards, repealing more than 530 national and
industrial standards. Meanwhile, it has speeded up the revision of over 2,460
national and industrial standards, issued over 200 new national standards, and
worked out plans to enact over 280 national standards. It also works hard to
promote and enforce these standards, and urges food producing enterprises to
strictly abide by them.
3.Food Certification and Accreditation System
Basically Established
The Certification and Accreditation Administration of
the People's Republic of China is responsible for administering, supervising and
coordinating certification and accreditation work throughout the country,
putting in order the certification market and regulating certification
activities. A pattern of uniform administration, standardized operation and
common implementation for the certification and accreditation of food and
agricultural products has come into being, basically establishing a
certification and accreditation system covering the entire process "from the
farming field to dining table." The certification categories include
certification of feeds, GAP certification, certification of hazard-free
agricultural products, certification of organic products, certification of food
quality, certification of the HACCP management system, and certification of
green markets. At present, China ranks among the top ten countries in the world
in this regard, with 2.03 million hectares producing certificated organic
products. The country has been experimenting with GAP certification geared to
international standards in 286 export enterprises and agricultural
standardization demonstration bases in 18 pilot provinces; 2,675 food producing
enterprises have received HACCP certificates; 28,600 primary agricultural
products have passed the certification tests for hazard-free agricultural
products; and continuous progress is being made in the certification of feeds,
alcoholic beverages by quality grade, and green markets. The government
continuously strengthens its supervision of certificated products and
enterprises, and increases the authoritativeness and effectiveness of
certification.
4.Food Safety Inspection and Testing
Framework Taken Initial Shape
Regarding the supervision of foodstuffs for the
domestic market, China has established a number of qualified food inspection and
testing institutions, bringing into initial being a food safety inspection and
testing framework with "state-level inspection institutions playing the leading
role, provincial- and ministerial-level food inspection institutions forming the
main body, and city- and county-level food inspection institutions acting as
supplement." With the improvement of their testing capability and level, these
institutions can satisfy the demands for quality and safety tests throughout the
entire process ¨C from the environment of place of origin, input materials,
production and processing, storage and circulation to consumption, and can
basically meet the requirements of national, industrial and relevant
international standards for food safety parameters. China adopts the
certification management that is in line with the international practice for
food laboratories, and strengthens international mutual recognition, information
sharing and joint tackling of key scientific and technological problems,
ensuring the accuracy and fairness of test results. China has accredited the
qualifications of some food inspection and testing institutions. Altogether,
3,913 food testing laboratories have passed the laboratory accreditation
(similar to metrology certification) of China National Accreditation Service for
Conformity Assessment (CNAS) among which 48 are state-level quality inspection
centers for foodstuffs and 35 are key food laboratories. The testing capability
and level of these laboratories have reached a relatively advanced international
standard. As regards the supervision of import and export foodstuffs, a
technical support system ensuring food safety has taken shape, with the 35
state-level key laboratories playing the leading role. There are 163 inspection
and quarantine laboratories for import and export foodstuffs throughout China,
possessing more than 10,000 sets of large precision instruments of various
types. Altogether, 1,189 professionals are directly engaged in the laboratory
testing of import and export foodstuffs in these laboratories, with a rational
age structure and allocation of staff according to their specialized fields.
These laboratories can detect all kinds of food-borne pathogens and 786 safety
or hygienic items, such as residue of pesticides and veterinary medicines,
additives and heavy metals. By 2006, China had set up 323 state- and
ministerial-level quality inspection centers and 1,780 provincial-, prefecture-
and county-level testing institutions concerned with agricultural products.
Thus, a quality and safety inspection and testing framework for agricultural
products, with these institutions at different levels supplementing each other,
has taken shape, providing technical support for strengthening the supervision
of the quality and safety of agricultural products.
V. International Exchanges and Cooperation
Regarding Food Safety
The Chinese government sets great store by
cooperating with other countries, regions and international organizations
regarding food safety, as well as by learning advanced management expertise and
monitoring technology, to improve the overall quality of its foodstuffs.
1. Strengthening Exchanges and Cooperation
Regarding Food Safety Technology
China encourages and supports its technical experts
to participate in various food safety technological training programs, seminars,
exchanges and comparative reviews. It also welcomes overseas experts to visit
China for study or training. Besides the activities organized by the World
Health Organization (WHO), China has, since 2001, conducted many rounds of
technological training and exchanges on food safety, especially the
implementation of the Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures (SPS), with the US, the EU, Italy, Canada, Germany, the UK,
Switzerland, Denmark, Australia, New Zealand and Thailand. In August 2006, China
sponsored food safety training for people from 14 South Pacific countries. To
furnish itself with timely information to ensure the foodstuffs it exports are
up to the relevant standards, China has translated the laws on food safety and
hygiene of the US, the EU, Russia, the ROK and other countries and regions. It
has also invited experts from the US, the EU and Japan to offer training on
HACCP application, the National Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP), residue
control and Positive List System. China's laboratories for import and export
food inspection and quarantine have taken part in several comparative
experiments, such as the Food Analysis Performance Assessment Scheme (FAPAS) of
the UK, and joined on regular intervals the international proficiency testing
conducted by established certification agencies, such as the Asia Pacific
Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (APLAC) and the Australia's National
Association of Testing Authorities (NATA). The national center for disease
control and prevention and a dozen provincial ones have passed the WHO food
safety inspection capacity verifications. By November 2006, a total of 22
inspection agencies had been granted by the ROK to be "Acknowledged Overseas
Official Inspection Agencies," which means that the food items that pass their
checks will be free from entry inspection in that country. The testing results
of the laboratories of the 35 quality inspection and quarantine agencies
directly under the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine have also won acknowledgement from Japan, and many of the
laboratories are open ones and have hosted delegations of experts from the US,
Canada, the UK, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand,
Japan, the ROK, Singapore, Hong Kong, as well as other countries and regions.
2. Actively Participating in International
Activities Regarding Food Safety
The Chinese government has always been a keen
advocator of and participant in international food safety activities. It has
dispatched delegations to the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC), the
International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) and other international
conferences. Its call for regional cooperation on food safety at a meeting of
the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) has received positive responses
from Australia, New Zealand and Southeast Asian countries, as a result of which
the APEC Food Safety Cooperation Forum was established, co-chaired by China and
Australia. China actively participates in international standardization
activities for food safety.
It is a member of the Technical Management Board and
Committee on Conformity Assessment of International Organization for
Standardization (ISO). In May 2007, it formally joined the World Organization
for Animal Health (OIE). On October 20-21, 2007, it will host, in Nanning, the
China-ASEAN Ministerial Conference on Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine, with the theme of "Strengthening Cooperation on Food Safety
Management and Protecting Consumer's Rights." The event will discuss the
establishment of a cooperative mechanism on food safety, so as to increase
exchanges and cooperation among the relevant departments of China and ASEAN to
ensure the quality, safety and sanitation of the foods traded among them.
3. Striving to Promote International
Cooperation Regarding Food Safety
While organizing regular and irregular seminars or
mutual visits of experts with Japan, the ROK, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore,
Norway, Russia, Hong Kong, and other countries and regions, China's General
Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine has signed 33
cooperative agreements or memorandums on food safety and 48 import and export
food inspection and quarantine protocols with 30 countries and regions, namely
the US, the EU, Russia, Japan, the ROK, Singapore, Thailand, Mongolia, Vietnam,
the Philippines, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Ireland, Hungary, Poland,
Italy, Norway, Switzerland, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Uruguay,
Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Hong Kong and Macao. Thus, a long-term and
effective cooperative mechanism between China and its food trade partners has
been established. And, based on this, the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine has built a system of annual meetings
with many countries and regions. The second China-EU meeting on safety of food
and consumer products at the ministerial level is scheduled to be held on
September 12, 2007 in Beijing, and the third China-US food safety meeting at the
vice-ministerial level is scheduled on September 11-12, 2007 in the
US.
4. Promoting Food Trade
The food safety cooperative mechanisms established
between China and other countries have greatly promoted bilateral and
multilateral cooperation to ensure the safety of foodstuffs traded among them
and ease the wide concerns about food safety. For instance, the Sino-Japanese
cooperative mechanism plays a key role in ensuring the safety of Chinese food
exported to Japan. After Japan's release of its Positive List System, the
Chinese government, through communications and negotiations, persuaded Japan to
accept its reasonable proposals and adjust some projects accordingly, and
co-sponsored three demonstrations and eight special training workshops to help
China's food export enterprises further standardize the use and administration
of pesticide and veterinary medicines, improve the quality tracing system and
guarantee the quality and safety of food exported to Japan. The China-US food
safety cooperative mechanism plays a similar role. Since the end of 2005,
China's entry-exit inspection and quarantine authorities have continuously found
residues of prohibited medicines, pollutants and pathogenic microbes in US meat
products exported to China. Their timely notification of such information let
the US learn of China's legal requirements concerning food safety, thus
effectively protecting Chinese consumers as well as ensuring healthy development
of US export of meat products to China. In 2004 and 2005, the two countries,
under this cooperative mechanism, evaluated the safety and sanitation of China's
exported cooked poultry products. The China-EU food safety cooperative mechanism
also works well in solving problems both sides are concerned about. Through
timely communication and on the basis of risk assessment, China has solved
problems in the import of pork products from some dioxin-affected EU countries.
While continuously improving its own food safety management and epidemic
prevention and control work, it has actively cooperated with the EU in
undertaking hygienic system inspection and risk appraisal which helps build
confidence in China's cooked poultry products. The EU has worked out a timetable
to resume imports of China's cooked poultry products in 2007.
Food is the first necessity of man, and it is the
most direct and most important consumption product of mankind. China is a
responsible country, and the Chinese government is devoted to working for the
benefits of the people. Over the years, the Chinese government has endeavored to
improve food quality, ensure food safety and protect consumers around the world.
But, it must be pointed out that China is still a developing country, and the
overall level of food safety, including the standards and the industrialization
level of food production, still lags behind that of developed countries. China
has a long way to go to improve the quality of foodstuffs. Food quality and
safety is a common concern of the human society and a shared duty of the
international community. As a large importer and exporter of food, China is keen
to strengthen exchanges and cooperation with other countries and make
unremitting efforts to ensure the safety of food and promote the healthy growth
of the global food trade.