Title: Session 1 Protecting consumers and ensuring choice
1Session 1Protecting consumers and ensuring choice
- CropLife International Annual Conference June 3,
2004
2Importance of regulation for sustainability and
health protection
- Jørgen Schlundt
- Director, WHO Food Safety Department
- Bruxelles
- 03.06.04
3Overview
- Context
- Regulations
- International harmonization
- Codex Alimentarius
- WTO SPS Agreement
- Health, trade and development
- Concluding remarks
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
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5Ethics
Food Safety in the air
6Context
- Food borne diseases important determinant for
public health - Globalization of food production and distribution
pose increased risk to safety of food - Increased emphasis on safeguards throughout the
food chain
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
7Global Food security
- inequity in the distribution of food
- the right to safe and nutritious food
- food standard setting and development
8Inequity and food
- Initiatives to decrease inequity have largely
failed - Look into enabling access to food markets
- Promote public good use of new technologies
- Safety rules is seen by some to impede this
- Safety evaluation needs an international scope
9International concernsfood safety standards
- do food safety standards favour interests of
developed nations - by considering solutions relevant to developed
countries? - by using experts from developed countries?
- by denying producers access to markets?
10Food Safety New DirectionsFocused intervention
- Survey foodborne disease and food contamination
- Assess the risk and the factors affecting it
- Define efficient intervention(s) and monitor
effect
11Risk Analysis
Risk Assessment
Risk Management
? Science based Explanation
? Policy based Implementation
Risk Communication
? Interactive exchange of information and
opinions concerning risks
12Regulations
- Regulations important mechanisms to ensure the
safety of food - Harmonized regulations should serve the needs of
both developed and developing countries - International harmonization of science-based
standards provide equal trading opportunities - Require substantial investment for (developing)
countries and private sector - Create opportunities
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
13International harmonizationFAO/WHO Codex
Alimentarius
- Establishment of international food safety
standards - Based on risk assessments (JECFA, JMPR, JEMRA, Ad
hoc Consultations) - Codex Trust Fund for enhanced participation of
developing countries in Codex
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
14Health, trade and development
- Win-Win situation
- Harmonized standards facilitate international
trade - International trade disputes trigger
- reform of national (public) food safety systems
- Implementation of risk management systems (e.g.
GAP, GMP, HACCP) by private sector - Developed countries should not create trade
barriers by establishing unnecessarily strict
safety standards -
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
15Improving Food Safety Developing countries
Win-Win
Improved food safety less illness, medical and
social costs, poverty
Food trade access international trade
capability safe national trade
Improved health improved participation in
development
Development
16Health, trade and developmentUltimate goal from
WHO perspective
- Enhanced consumer health protection through
- strengthened national food safety infrastructure
(institutions, policy, legislation, enforcement,
interaction with responsible private sector) - as a result of sustainable economic development
and improved market access built on equitable
international standards
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
17Food Safety in developing countries- the future
Production for export - economic development
Improved Food Safety Systems
National food safety - improved health
The systems approach
Potential development
18International harmonizationWTO SPS Agreement
- Members have right to take sanitary and
phyto-sanitary measures to protect health - Measures should be based on risk assessment
- Members have obligation to harmonize with
international standards (e.g. Codex) - Members have obligation to assist developing
countries (Art. 9)
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
19Concluding remarks
- WHO's role
- Guide and Support Codex
- Provide scientific advice
- Enhance participation of developing countries
through Codex Trust Fund - Focuse capacity building, in co-operation with
FAO and STDF (WB, WTO, FAO, WHO, OIE, Codex and
IPPC)
CropLife International Annual Conference, 3 June
2004, Brussels, Belgium
20(No Transcript)