Daily Dispatch

Processed meat sector blocked rules proposal

- By LINDA ENSOR

THE National Regulator for Compulsory Standards (NRCS) said yesterday that it had developed regulatory standards for the processed meat industry in 2014‚ but that implementa­tion was blocked when industry players rejected the proposed levies as being too high.

Processed meats have been identified as the cause of the outbreak of listeriosi­s‚ which has killed about 180 people.

Currently the NRCS regulates only canned-meat products and the processing facilities of canned-meat products‚ which can be distribute­d or sold only after they have been physically inspected.

NRCS acting CEO Edward Mamadise told parliament’s trade and industry committee that there were no compulsory specificat­ions for processed meat products, which were not regulated by the NRCS.

“A standard was developed with the view to regulate processed meat products. However‚ due to disagreeme­nts with the industry‚ the regulation was deferred to the Department of Health. The final draft of the compulsory specificat­ions was accepted during a full stakeholde­r meeting on March 7 2014. However‚ the industry argued that the operationa­l costs for the levies presented were too high‚” Mamadise said.

A levy subcommitt­ee comprising members from the manufactur­ers‚ retailers‚ the Consumer Goods Council of SA‚ the South African National Consumer Union and the NRCS was set up in a bid to reach a solution‚ but no agreement could be reached. Instead, the processed meat manufactur­ers proposed a model of self-regulation at a meeting with the Department of Trade and Industry in October 2014.

“The meeting noted that the identified risks emanating from the NRCS risk and impact analysis reports should not be ignored‚” Mamadise said.

He told MPs the matter ended up with only compositio­nal quality regulation‚ which was proposed by the Department of Agricultur­e‚ Forestry and Fisheries in July last year. “The hygiene requiremen­ts are no part of this proposed regulation and will still only be covered in the general requiremen­t for all foodstuffs under the Department of Health‚” he said.

Commenting on this revelation‚ DA spokespers­on on trade and industry Dean Macpherson‚ said: “The claim for culpabilit­y is now moving rapidly towards manufactur­ers for turning a blind eye to these risks which have claimed the lives of 180 people”. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa