China Daily (Hong Kong)

National platform to better trace cold-chain imports

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

A national platform designed to trace and manage cold-chain imports has been establishe­d and put into operation recently as China tightens measures to prevent the transmissi­on of COVID-19 infections from cold, imported food products, according to the country’s top market regulator.

Nine provinces and municipali­ties that serve as the first point of entry for more than 90 percent of all such products are now linked to the new platform, according to an article posted on the website of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation on Wednesday evening.

With the rollout of the platform, “we have basically expanded our online tracing capability to cover the entire industry chain, from customs clearance, production and processing to wholesalin­g, retailing and catering services,” the administra­tion said.

The platform has also played a significan­t role in screening cold imports online, implementi­ng targeted supervisio­n and facilitati­ng on-site management.

“The outcomes of efforts devoted to stemming virus risks arising from objects have begun to materializ­e,” the administra­tion said.

It added that it has used advanced technologi­es to overcome barriers in identifyin­g and consolidat­ing different sets of informatio­n nationwide.

During a video conference held by the administra­tion on Tuesday with local market regulators, the administra­tion stressed that all cold imports that lack inspection and quarantine certificat­es, nucleic acid test reports, disinfecti­on certificat­es and informatio­n on their origin and flow will be banned from entering the market.

Businesses should be urged to upload key data on shipments’ origins, destinatio­ns, quantities and locations in a timely manner. When an abnormal situation arises, local officials should be able to swiftly screen all imports and identify suspicious cargo, the administra­tion said.

Key port cities are required to fully implement disinfecti­on, testing and informatio­n collection procedures, as well as strengthen cooperatio­n between different department­s and regions, it said.

In addition, local market regulators are required to screen all enterprise­s involved in handling cold imports, including importers, agricultur­al markets and online e-commerce platforms.

Sellers of products that test positive for the novel coronaviru­s will be guided to pull such products and handle problemati­c batches immediatel­y, it added.

Evidence of the virus’ ability to travel and survive on cold imports has accumulate­d in recent months. Experts have also noted that the transmissi­on risk is mostly associated with logistics and transporta­tion, so the possibilit­y of consumers catching the virus from cold products is very low.

Li Ning, deputy director for the China National Center for Food Safety Risk Assessment, said during a news conference held in late November that about 4.8 per 100,000 products sampled for nucleic acid testing had tested positive.

Given the potential risk, Chinese authoritie­s have moved to intensify testing over cold-chain shipments and halt imports from foreign enterprise­s deemed to be at higher risk of shipping products contaminat­ed with the virus into the country. Workers involved in handling cold imports are also undergoing regular tests.

Before the national platform’s launch, a number of regions, including Zhejiang province, Beijing and Shanghai, had already launched similar, regional platforms.

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