BEIJING, Sept.1 -- China is now working on a new
system of food safety standards that is expected to guarantee people's health
and be more compatible with international norms, said a senior health official
Saturday in Beijing.
"The Ministry of Health is now working with other
government agencies to formulate a new system of food safety standards, as
required by the country's new food safety law that went into effect June 1 this
year," said Vice Minister of Health Chen Xiaohong at the Food and Drug Safety
Responsibility Forum on Saturday.
According to Chen, the new system will integrate
existing food safety standards, eliminate areas that overlap or contradict each
other, and establish new standards for areas that previously lacked regulation.
"The amount of pathogenic microorganisms, pesticide
residue, microorganism residue, heavy metals and pollutants in food products, as
well as the use of food additives are the priority areas," noted Chen. "We are
also building up an expert team on food safety standards."
Chen promised transparency in the making of the new
system and encouraged experts and enterprises to submit suggestions. The new
system will also be subject to the opinions of international organizations and
other countries, in line with a request from the WTO, he said.
In addition to the implementation of the new law, the
ministry is also stepping up efforts to establish an efficient food safety
coordination mechanism, improve the health emergency response system, and set up
a food safety risk-monitoring and assessment system.
A database is under construction to facilitate the
flow of information between different government agencies involved in food
safety administration and supervision.
Speaking at the forum, Chen also urged food and drug
companies to shoulder their share of responsibility in safeguarding people's
health.
"Food and drug safety has a direct bearing on
people's health and also sustains the sound development of the whole industry,"
he said. "It also reflects the credibility and social responsibility of an
individual enterprise. Experiences have shown that an enterprise can generate
more economic returns when putting people's health above anything else."
His opinion was echoed by another participant at the
forum, Wang Maolin, the vice chairman of the Law Committee of the 10th National
People's Congress.
Wang said food and drug enterprises should change
their role of an economic entity to that of a social entity and take on more
social responsibility.
He said that corporate social responsibility (CSR)
can measure an enterprise's business ethics and constitutes a threshold in
entering some overseas markets. According to Wang, Chinese enterprises have to
pass CSR examinations before entering developed markets such as the EU, U.S. and
Japan.
In a show of support for the government's efforts to
reduce repeating food scandals that batter the industry's reputation and
consumer confidence, participating entrepreneurs signed their names on an
initiative to produce safe food and drugs.
The Forum on Food and Drug Safety is the summer
summit of the International CEO Roundtable of Chinese and Foreign Multinational
Corporations, which is held in mid-November every year in Beijing. About 700
people from various government agencies, businesses and media organizations
attended Saturday's forum.
(Source: China.org.cn)