Stabroek News

Catfish exporters suffering as Guyana fails to meet ...

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claimed, while pointing out that when he was exporting, he would usually send about 100,000 lbs of frozen catfish to New York every month.

“I’m one of the biggest exporters in the country, and we are also freezing for other people who ship to America. I personally used to ship about 50,000 pounds and the other four, who are freezing at my company, adds up to about 100,000 pounds per month coming out from my company to America, which is the biggest market for we,” Sukdeo said.

He explained that currently his business has been stagnated since he is unable to access a large portion of the market he used to tap. As a result, he was forced to dump thousands of pounds of frozen and smoked catfish.

“Right now the company close and can’t work since they ban it. Since then we haven’t been able to ship and I got two forty foot container to throw away today, and that is thousands of US dollars. They have more people who got about the same amount and them hoping to get anybody to buy it because they don’t have enough space here for it,” he said.

Sukdeo added that if the situation continues as it is, over 70 persons from his company, alone, are expected to be laid off, and hundreds of fishermen are already being affected since they have stopped fishing for catfish.

“The big market that we accustomed to isn’t accessible anymore, so dem fishermen can’t do anything. If they come with a whole set nobody not going to buy from them because we can’t ship it nowhere,” Sukdeo added.

The fish exporter explained that currently he is trying to supplement the lost market by shipping more to the Suriname market, however, they are unwilling to take the smoked fish since they prefer to smoke it themselves. Despite being able to flood the other markets with more fish, Sukdeo said that it will not make sense unless the ban is addressed, and they are able to tap into the market again.

In 2015, FSIS amended its regulation­s to establish a mandatory inspection programme for fish of the order Siluriform­es and products derived from these species.

The amendment was the result of a 15year battle by the Catfish Farmers of America (CFA) to curtail catfish imports from Vietnam. The US government had previously passed the 2008 and 2014 Farm Bills, which amended the Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA), to make ‘‘catfish’’ a species amenable to the FMIA, and therefore, subject to FSIS inspection, before removing the term ‘‘catfish,’’ so as to make ‘‘all fish of the order Siluriform­es’’ subject to FSIS jurisdicti­on and inspection.

The 2015 standards, which became effective on March 1st, 2016, demand the presence of inspectors in (processing) plants for one-hour during an eight hour shift. According to the USDA website, though the standards became effective in 2016, a transition­al period was granted before full enforcemen­t commenced on September 1st, 2017.

Guyana’s Veterinary Public Health Director Dr Ozaye Dodson, was quoted in a Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) media release this week as saying, “Our (Fisheries) Act is broad, covering all species of fish. The US has specific regulation­s for the catfish species [and] there [have] been no changes to the local Act since 2003. There will have to be some adjustment­s to the Fisheries Act Inspection Manual and Regulation­s to bridge the gaps.” He also added that changes to the country’s Fisheries Act and Regulation­s will be taken shortly to the Attorney General’s Chambers and published in the Official Gazette.

According to the MoPH statement Dodson described the temporary ban as a “protection­ist measure” by that country’s public health system and the catfish farmers who have invested heavily to develop the industry there.

The US Embassy here says that Guyana was notified since November 2015 of the steps that needed to be taken to avoid a ban on the export of catfish to the United States but that the country is still not in compliance.

In a statement on Wednesday, the US Embassy said that the notificati­on came more than 18 months before the amended regulation­s pertaining to catfish (siluriform­es) were to take effect.

“We even gave Guyana an extension until February 3, 2018 to comply with the new regulation­s,” the statement said, while pointing out that most countries in the hemisphere have already complied with the regulation­s and the US believes that Guyana eventually “can and will comply as well.”

“We understand that the Government of Guyana is working on complying but it has not fully met the standards of the new processes associated with the regulation­s and until it does we cannot accept any catfish from Guyana,” the Embassy said, while adding that the US has offered technical assistance to help Guyanese fishermen and women to comply.

The embassy says that the offer still stands but it cannot be accomplish­ed overnight and the goal of the US is to ensure consistenc­y in food safety regulation­s across products and countries, and to protect marine life for future generation­s.

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