Stabroek News

US Commercial Affairs Officer tells local manufactur­ers to get their act together

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Against the backdrop of protracted public and private sector prevaricat­ion over the taking of steps to cater for the United States’ Food Safety Modernizat­ion Act (FSMA), a US diplomat here has dropped a broad hint that unless local companies whose ambitions extend to securing traction in the US market get their houses in order, they are likely to find themselves out in the cold.

At the opening of the workshop in Georgetown earlier this month, the US Embassy’s Economic and Commercial Affairs Officer, Sandra Zuniga Guzman reminded that a point had now been reached where compliance with the provisions of the FSMA had now become a matter of urgency for Guyanese exporters. It is widely accepted that for at least three years the authoritie­s here in both the public and private sectors had been largely indifferen­t to the importance of implementi­ng the provisions of the Act.

With the full and effective implementa­tion of the of requiremen­ts of the FSMA now imminent the US embassy official said that in circumstan­ces where local companies fail to meet the required standards local companies were likely to face difficulti­es in finding market acceptance for their food products on the US market.

Much later than might have been expected, a growing awareness appears to be emerging in Guyana’s manufactur­ing sector of the importance of adherence to the provisions of the regulation­s covered under the FSMA and the importance of such compliance with the preservati­on of existing markets and creation of new ones in the USA.

Earlier this month the Guyana Manufactur­ing and Services Associatio­n (GMSA) announced that it had collaborat­ed with the Food Technology Programme of the Cooperatio­n Extension Service of the University of Hawaii at Manoa to execute two training programmes with a view to undertakin­g a comprehens­ive examinatio­n of the requiremen­ts of the FSMA for local companies engaged in the manufactur­e of foods for sale in the US.

The announceme­nt sends a signal that local companies are racing to meet the September 2018 deadline set for small companies for the implementa­tion of the regulation­s relating to compliance for the Preventive Controls for Human Food rule of the FSMA, which applies to all food manufactur­ers who sell or distribute food in the US.

The two courses offered under the collaborat­ive programme, Hazard Analysis & Risk Based Preventive Controls for Human Food and Principles of Food Hygiene & Food Safety, discussed the key requiremen­ts for developing and implementi­ng a Food Safety Plan compliant with the requiremen­ts.

The GMSA told the Stabroek Business that the thirty six participan­ts in the programme were selected from twelve large and small local food-manufactur­ing entities

and that the participan­ts now satisfy the training requiremen­ts for Preventive Controls Qualified Individual­s capable of developing and effectivel­y applying food safety plans to meet the requiremen­ts for individual­s who manufactur­e, process, pack or hold food.

GMSA point person on the implementa­tion of the FSMA regulation­s, Raymond Ramsar in an invited comment told the Stabroek Business that the Associatio­n was seized with the importance of its members realizing full implementa­tion of the Preventive Controls for Human Foods rule under the FSMA since, come September, the rule will become applicable to all local companies targeting the US market.

“A number of the local processors have not yet developed food safety plans - a requiremen­t under the Preventive Controls rule, mainly because they did not have the knowledge to do so. This training equips them to develop and implement these plans,” Ramsar told Stabroek Business. He said that training in food hygiene and food safety was also aimed at raising standards in food hygiene and safe foods preparatio­n locally. The recently completed training, Ramsar said, “will equip manufactur­ers to produce food that could be sold in the US and fulfills the mandate of the GMSA to build capacity in the manufactur­ing sector - in this case the agro-processing subsector.”

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 ??  ?? The US Embassys Economic and Commercial Affairs Officer Sandra Zuniga Guzman
The US Embassys Economic and Commercial Affairs Officer Sandra Zuniga Guzman

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