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Local industry and commerce
administration officials inspect the quality of food products at a
supermarket in Huaibei City, east China's Anhui Province, Sept. 11,
2007. (Xinhua Photo)
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BEIJING, Dec. 22 (Xinhua) -- All Chinese food
enterprises will be required to have a "QS" (quality safety) label on their
products to gain market access starting on Jan. 1, the country's quality
watchdog announced.
For food products produced without
the stamp before the date, enterprises could negotiate with the individual
sellers to keep them on the shelves, said Bi Yu'an, an official with the General
Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), in an
on-line interview at www.gov.cn on Friday.
Food products made in small workshops would be
required to have another symbol instead of "QS" since they were sold in limited
regions. Bi gave no further details about that symbol.
The country's market access labeling system was first
put into practice in 2002 to guarantee food quality and safety. However, the
system hadn't yet been applied to all food products.
At the end of June, some 107,000 food production
licenses had been issued to enterprises, accounting for over 90 percent of the
market, according to a report about the country's food quality and safety
released in August.
By the end of June, 1,276 food production licenses
had been withdrawn, cancelled, revoked or nullified for substandard food
products, the report revealed.
China launched a four-month nationwide campaign to
crack down on unqualified food products between late August and the middle of
December.
A total of 192,400 unlicensed food shops were closed
and some 1,253.5 tons of substandard food were withdrawn during the campaign,
according to the State Administration for Industry and
Commerce.