VietNamNet Bridge – The new Food Safety Law has left many food companies perplexed over where to go for their documents when the Law takes effect in July.
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To facilitate implementation of the law and reduce the administrative burden on firms, MoH is compiling a draft decree which is expected to provide detailed regulations on obtaining a food safety certificate, management of genetically modified products and responsibilities of relevant authorities.
Nguyen Cong Khan, director of Viet Nam Food Administration under MoH and also head of the board compiling the draft, called for contributions to the draft decree at a workshop held yesterday, April 7.
The draft decree was built on the needs of consumers and firms, he said, adding it was expected that each food firm would only deal with a single authority.
The draft calls for safety certificates to be issued by whichever ministry is in charge of that specific product. However, director of Dekalb Ltd Co Nguyen Thanh Ki said that genetically modified products are controlled by MARD while products that include processed milk and vegetable oils are controlled by MoIT could potentially contain genetically-modified ingredients.
"The guiding decree needs to include regulations to solve the overlaps in management," he said.
Phan Thi Kim, former head of the Viet Nam Food Administration said there were about 9 million household food producers in the country and most food-related risk arose from this group which included street food vendors. However, as written the draft said that street vendors were not a target for food safety certificates and their control at all levels would fall under local People's Committees. So, a regulation about street food needed to be included in the decree, she said.
The draft also proposes a valid time limit for the certificates. Food producers with quality management certificates such as HACCP, GMP and ISO 9001 would receive five-year certificates while two or three year certificates would be offered to those without.
A representative from Abbott Laboratories Company said that the decree also needed to clarify a time limit for authorities to respond to firms after submission of an application for a food safety certificate.
The draft also regulates that in addition to expiration date information, the term "best before [date]" could be printed on the label.
After the "best-before-date", the products could still remain on the market if their producers could prove they were still safe for human consumption.
Le Thuy Duong from AusAID, the Australian Government's Overseas Aid Programme, said that when referring to "best before", the producers/importers or exporters needed to add "the product is best before… " and "in which condition", which would help to avoid complaints about the product quality if they were not kept in proper conditions.
VietNamNet/Viet Nam News
