China Daily

Quality of agricultur­al products to improve

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Agricultur­e has published a five-year plan to improve the quality of agricultur­al products, including measures to ensure that products such as apples, tea and pork can be traced back to their producers.

According to the ministry’s plan, which was made public on Monday, more than 97 percent of major agricultur­al products involved in routine monitoring will pass quality tests in the next five years.

In 2015, 96.1 percent of vegetables, 99.4 percent of poultry and livestock, and 95.5 percent of aquatic products passed routine quality tests, the ministry said.

The ministry will also speed up the developmen­t of a platform that can trace agricultur­al products to their origin, according to the plan.

The tracing platform will first be implemente­d in more developed areas, and for products such as raw milk and turbot, it added.

The government will also encourage nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to supervise the quality of agricultur­al products, with a mechanism that encourages whistleblo­wing set to be establishe­d.

Chen Xiaohua, vice-minister of agricultur­e, told a news conference in December that the platform that traces agricultur­al products to their origin has already been in test operation in some areas.

He added that the top legislatur­e is now mulling a revision to the Law on Quality and Safety of Agricultur­al Products, which is expected to include items on ensuring that agricultur­al products can be traceable.

The ministry said there are still issues involving pesticide residue and environmen­tal pollution in the places of origin of agricultur­al products.

“The public’s demand for agricultur­al products has also shifted from merely filling stomachs to a need for good, safe and nutritious products,” it said.

Han Changfu, minister of agricultur­e, said on the sidelines of the two sessions — the annual gatherings of the nation’s top legislatur­e and its top political advisory body — in Beijing on March 8 that the country will launch a campaign to curb diseases at livestock and poultry farms to fight pollution in rural areas.

The excessive use of fertilizer­s in horticultu­ral sectors, such as the cultivatio­n of fruits and vegetables, will also be targeted as the authority tries to increase the use of organic fertilizer­s, Han added.

In the past five years, the ministry has already set 4,140 standards for pesticide residue in relation to agricultur­al products, and another 1,584 standards for veterinary drug residue in relation to livestock and poultry products.

The total number of standards for residue levels for the two categories will reach 10,000 in five years, according to the plan.

 ?? GE YINIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A customer traces the origin of her products at a market in Hefei, capital of Anhui province, in January.
GE YINIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY A customer traces the origin of her products at a market in Hefei, capital of Anhui province, in January.

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