Business Day

New port inspection regulation­s are playing with fire

- Paul Matthew ● Matthew is AMIE CEO.

Government regulation­s play a vital role in ensuring a fair, safe and sustainabl­e food sector, and they ensure that business is compliant with standards set out by the country’s laws. Yet if they are implemente­d without the accompanyi­ng measures to mitigate unintended consequenc­es they can spell disaster.

Nowhere is this balance more apparent than in the upheaval at SA ports. Despite the fact that the ports are already congested and in a state of crisis, the department of agricultur­e, land reform & rural developmen­t and the Border Management Agency recently mandated that every container entering the country be subject to veterinary inspection.

Previously consignmen­ts, made up of many containers, would be subject to a randomised daily inspection process. In effect this means inspection­s of containers have increased by 75%.

The problem with this is that it was implemente­d without increasing the number of veterinary inspectors or the hours allocated for inspection­s, and without any risk assessment being conducted by the Border Management Agency or department. There is no scientific justificat­ion for the introducti­on of this new requiremen­t.

As a result of the new inspection procedures, ports across the country are experienci­ng a backlog and mass container congestion. The situation is being compounded by the fact that many of the food containers need refrigerat­ion, and there are not enough plug points. This will have serious consequenc­es for jobs at cold stores and result in food security concerns, especially for poor consumers.

The veterinary inspection decision — introduced without notice — has a range of damaging consequenc­es and is placing unbearable pressure on SA ports, on the inspectors themselves, on cold store facilities and on importers of critical foodstuffs.

The entire value chain for food will be in further peril unless the department and the agency come up with an urgent plan to either increase capacity for inspection­s and inspecting hours, or revert to the former system until they are able to put measures in place to address the backlog.

Previously, importers were allowed to break veterinary seals and offload products into government-approved cold storage facilities, where inspectors would conduct inspection­s in line with defined processes, with subsequent sampling for microbiolo­gical testing. The new conditions mandate full inspection­s and offloading in the presence of inspectors, increasing processing times as it requires the inspectors to be available for protracted periods without considerin­g stretched resources.

The Associatio­n of Meat Importers & Exporters (AMIE) of Southern Africa is concerned about the lack of foresight in implementi­ng these changes, which overlooked their far-reaching implicatio­ns. With inspection­s now consuming three to four hours per container and no provision for additional resources, port throughput has plummeted, worsening backlogs and escalating demurrage charges.

Because of the congestion food importers are being forced to pay additional container storage costs and demurrage charges, which are levied for failure to discharge product within the agreed time. One company alone recently paid R325,000 in demurrage charges for a two-week period, off a base of zero previously.

On top of this, delays in clearing containers will have a negative impact on SA’s successful citrus export sector, whose season will soon begin, as the reefer containers used for imports need to be emptied and cleared for use in citrus exports. This will cause further backlogs at the port.

Beyond the logistical hurdles there is a broader concern about the need for such stringent measures. Existing protocols already ensure the integrity and safety of imported foodstuff through rigorous quality control procedures.

Given these challenges it is imperative that government and industry stakeholde­rs engage in collaborat­ive dialogue aimed at finding sustainabl­e solutions. This needs a holistic approach that balances regulatory imperative­s with the operationa­l realities of port management and the imperative of ensuring uninterrup­ted access to critical food supplies.

As SA navigates the complexiti­es of global trade and regulatory compliance, it is critical that all stakeholde­rs work together, even if it means going back to the drawing board by reverting to the previous standard while developing an implementa­tion plan that includes measures to supplement the inspection protocols.

This is important given that any delays in our ports inevitably means that the country experience­s delays in putting food on the table. Some 80% of all chicken meat imports that come into the country is mechanical­ly deboned meat, which is used to produce vital and affordable protein such as polony, viennas and Russian sausages. It is only a matter of time before the backlog has a serious effect on those who produce these meat products, and the consumers who buy them.

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