Title: The International Food Standards and Recommendations
1The International Food Standards and
Recommendations
Prof. Elisaveta Stikova M.D., Ph.D. School
of Medicine University St. Cyril and Methodius
Skopje Republic of Macedonia
2The expansion of international food trade leads
to
- Social and economical benefit,
- Many trade barriers,
- Increase of food related hazards,
- Need for protection of human, animal and plant
life and health, - Need for fair and correct practice.
3International Organizations
- Codex Alimentarius for food safety and human
health, - International Office of Epizootics for animal
health and zoonoses, - International Plant Protection Convention for
plant health.
4Codex Alimentarius Commission
- Founded by FAO in 1961 and WHO in 1963,
- 167 member countries,
- Responsible for the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards
Program since 1962, - http//www.codexalimentarius.net/
5Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC)
- Objectives
- To protect human health,
- To accept food standards,
- To protect consumer rights,
- To ensure fair food trade practice.
6Organization of CAC
- Executive Committee
- 5 Regional Committees,
- 9 Horizontal Committees,
- 11 Product Committees,
- 3 Ad-hoc Intergovernmental Task Working
Groups
7CAC supports
- Scientists and researchers,
- Scientific and research laboratories,
- Scientific and research institutes,
- Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committees
8Structure and contents of Codex Alimentarius
- Codex Alimentarius is composed of 14 volumes
distributed in 17 books - Each book (by group of products) contains
standards, guidelines, recommendations...
9Achievements
- 237 Food Standards,
- 3274 Limits for pesticides residues,
- 1300 Food additives evaluated,
- 289 Limits of veterinary drug residues,
- 197 Pesticides evaluated,
- 43 Code of Practice,
- 33 Guidelines.
10Transparency of Codex Alimentarius
- The information for all the standards,
regulations, guides and other recommendations are
available on the web page http//www.codexalimenta
rius.net/
11 National Codex Contact Point function
- Relation between the Secretariat and the member
countries - Coordination of all relevant Codex activities in
their own country, - Acceptance of all final Codextexts (standards,
guidelines, advisory texts)
12International Organization for Epizootics (OIE)
- Founded by International Agreement in 1924,
- 162 member countries,
- www.oie.int
13OIE Objectives
-
- To ensure transparency of animal diseases
status in the world, - To collect, analyze and disseminate
- veterinary scientific information,
- To develop animal health and biological
standards, - To coordinate approach to disease
- outbreaks.
14OIE Organization
- International Committee
- Central Bureau,
- Working Groups,
- 5 Regional Commissions,
- 4 Specialist Technical Commissions
15OIE Specialist Technical Commissions
- International Animal Health Code Commission,
- Standards Commission,
- Foot and Mouth Disease and other Epizootics
Commissions and - Fish Diseases Commission.
16Achievements
- The Code - provides international standards,
- The Manual - gives the diagnostic techniques and
vaccine control methods, - A Code and Manual for aquatic animals.
17Network
- 144 Reference Laboratories in 30 countries,
- cover 47 terrestrial and 22 aquatic animal
diseases - 9 Collaborating Centers in 7 countries,
- Centers of expertise and standardization
18Transparency of OIE(1)
- Reporting for disease outbreaks and
incidents - Active search and verification of non-official
information - Improving of knowledge for the global data
situation - Data quality,
- Essential for safe trade
19Transparency of OIE(2)
- OIE Early Warning System,
- Weekly Diseases Information,
- Two-month bulletins,
- Three-month scientific review,
- Annual World Animal Health Report.
20International Plant Protection Convention(IPPC)
- IPPC came in force in 1952,
- Amended in 1979, 1991 and 1997
- 117 member countries
- http//www.ippc.int
21IPPC Objectives(1)
- To provide joint and effective action to
prevent the introduction and spread of pests of
plants and plant products, - To provide joint and effective action to prevent
the entry and spread of plant and plant product
diseases,
22IPPC Objectives(2)
- To promote appropriate measures for
- phytosanitary control,
- To develop phytosanitary standards,
- To support the harmonization of regulation,
23IPPC Objectives(3)
- To conduct treatments and certify exports,
- To share information on pests and regulations,
- To define storage conditions,
- To control biological pests/organisms.
24Trade elements of the IPPC
- International standards for phytosanitary
measures, - Phytosanitary certification,
- Dispute settlement,
- Requirements for imports.
25IPPC Organization
- IPPC Secretariat,
- 9 Regional Plant Protection Organizations
- Interim Commission on Phytosanitary measures,
- Standards Committee.
26Relationship to the IPPC
- GMOs
- Biosafety, biocontrol and application of
phytosanitary measures, - Alien invasive species,
- Environmental hazards/risks.
27Transparency of IPPC
- To facilitate mandatory information exchange of
- standards,
- pest status,
- regulations, requirements,
- pest lists,
- non-compliance, emergencies.