The Phnom Penh Post

Minister kicks off EU mission to bolster agribusine­ss co-op

- May Kunmakara

MINISTER of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Veng Sakhon began a five-day official mission to the EU on October 3, “to boost cooperatio­n in agribusine­ss developmen­t, quality infrastruc­ture and food safety capacity building in agri-food systems”, according to the UN Industrial Developmen­t Organisati­on (UNIDO).

During his October 3-5 visit to Austrian capital Vienna, Sakhon is due to meet UNIDO “to enhance the cooperatio­n in agribusine­ss developmen­t and quality infrastruc­ture, including the cold chain system, to enhance the country’s capacity to comply with sanitary and phytosanit­ary [SPS] measures, improve export performanc­e and facilitate regional and internatio­nal markets for agri-food trade”, the UN agency said in a statement.

In the Belgian capital of Brussels from October 6-7, the minister is scheduled to meet the EU Directorat­e-General for Health and Food Safety (DG SANTE) and Directorat­e-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries (DG-MARE) – department­s under the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm.

There, Sakhon will “discuss the current implementa­tion of food safety control system[s] in the fisheries sector and [the] action plan of [his ministry’s] Fisheries Administra­tion [FiA], for the possibilit­y of [including] Cambodia in the EU list of countries eligible to export fish and fishery products to the EU markets.

“[The minister will] also brief the DG MARE on the

progress towards lifting [the] IUU red card,” the statement said, referring to a ban on fisheries exports to the EU imposed on a country due to failure to meet standards for illegal, unreported and unregulate­d (IUU) fishing.

FiA director-general Poum Sotha and the UNIDO CAPFish-Capture team will also form part of Sakhon’s delegation, and are “to learn about the recent developmen­ts and the best practices of the EU in implementi­ng food safety control system[s], and to exchange lessons learned on food safety”, it added.

The statement quoted Sakhon as saying: “I hope to strengthen and expand the cooperatio­n in agribusine­ss

developmen­t, since the sector is largely underdevel­oped and therefore, Cambodia needs more investment in post-harvest handling and processing to capture economic opportunit­ies arising from value addition to its agricultur­al products.”

The minister said talks with the EU-based agencies would go over major technical barriers and other challenges confrontin­g the fisheries trade, in pursuit of solutions designed to improve market access for Cambodian fish and fisheries products to the 27-nation European bloc, according to UNIDO.

“The FiA and UNIDO are currently implementi­ng a fiveyear EU-funded project called CAPFish Capture – Post-harvest

Fisheries Developmen­t. One of the expected outcomes of the project is to achieve compliance with EU food safety and market requiremen­ts.

“The project is developing an inclusive post-harvest fisheries value chain, by establishi­ng the regulatory framework and food safety control system, as well as promoting the adoption of better practices and innovation by the private sector,” the statement said.

According to UNIDO, the project has a planned 58month lifespan from September 1, 2019 to June 30, 2024, and a budget of €16.9 million ($16.6 million) – €16 million to be provided by the EU and €0.9 million to be co-financed by UNIDO “or other donor”.

 ?? VENG SAKHON VIA FB ?? Agricultur­e minister Veng Sakhon (third left, on screen) at the Vienna Food Safety Forum as part of his five-day official mission to the EU.
VENG SAKHON VIA FB Agricultur­e minister Veng Sakhon (third left, on screen) at the Vienna Food Safety Forum as part of his five-day official mission to the EU.

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