Press Releases

PSHWF visits Beijing to discuss food safety

< Back

The Permanent Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food, Mrs Carrie Yau, today (May 15) led a delegation to Beijing to attend the inaugural meeting of the Steering Group on Safe Food Supply to Hong Kong to discuss the safety of Mainland food for supply to Hong Kong with the Director-General of the Import and Export Food Safety Bureau of the State General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), Mr Li Yuanping.

She also updated her Mainland counterparts on the latest work of the Hong Kong side in raising the food safety standard.

Speaking at the meeting, Mrs Yau said the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government had all along maintained close liaison and communication with the relevant Mainland authorities, particularly in the control and prevention of avian influenza and managing eruptive food incidents, and non-scheduled meetings were frequently held when needed.

The setting up of the Steering Group on Safe Food Supply to Hong Kong was an enhancement of the existing mechanism to ensure a more macro and forward-looking approach be adopted in the work of promoting food safety. These included the implementation of administrative or legislative measures as well as any complementary arrangements.

Speaking on enhanced mechanism, Mrs Yau said that to further promote food safety, putting in place an effective importer/supplier registration system was very important. "This can help trace the sources of food, early identification of problematic food, more proactively guard against problematic food entering into the food chain, and hence protect public health," she said.

"We will continue to explore with the relevant departments on the Mainland how to better our existing food regulatory mechanism, such as widening the scope of imported food that need to be accompanied with health certificates, putting more categories of food under regulation and control, as well as opening up new modes of food tests. We will review food regulatory infrastructure and complementary facilities to cope with the development in various testing and regulatory mechanism."

At the meeting, both sides exchanged views over safeguarding the food safety of food for supply to Hong Kong and reaffirmed the future direction in food safety regulation, including the continual adoption of the dual gate-keeping mode as the axis for controlling at source and supplemented by inspection and testing by the two places.

To enhance safeguarding food safety of food for supply to Hong Kong, Mainland authorities and Hong Kong had reached agreement to adopt the following new initiatives this year:

* Vegetables: AQSIQ had strengthened control measures over the source of vegetables for supply to Hong Kong and Macau. Among these, it was stipulated that those vegetable farms and processing plants, if not listed on AQSIQ website, could not export their produce to Hong Kong and Macau. These measures would cover non-leafy vegetables as well starting from October this year;

* Live fish: Guangdong Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau (GDCIQ) would further impose control on live freshwater fish for supply to Hong Kong by putting seals on Mainland vessels transporting fish to Hong Kong. The new measure could be implemented in the coming one or two months the soonest; and

* Eggs: Starting from January this year, all Mainland eggs had to be accompanied with health certificates before entering into Hong Kong. They should also come from approved farms and processing plants accredited by AQSIQ to ensure the products were fit for consumption.

Regarding future work directions, the HWFB briefed the AQSIQ on the present legislative work in Hong Kong. Views were exchanged between both sides, including:

* The food safety bill now being drafted would integrate the existing laws regulating food safety. It would bring under regulation food which has higher safety risk or of wide public concern, including farmed aquatic products, vegetables and fruits. To comply with the legislative requirements, the Mainland and other exporting countries had to provide health certificates for their food supplying to Hong Kong; and

* Hong Kong would introduce a more comprehensive and clearer subsidiary legislation to impose control on the standard of pesticide residues. The standard on preservatives in food would be categorised based on food types to enhance regulatory transparency and meet international standard. Farmers and manufacturers from the Mainland and other exporting countries would have to meet the new standard.

To implement the regulatory measures more effectively, the AQSIQ and HWFB agreed in the Steering Group meeting that Hong Kong would host the Guangdong, Hong Kong, Macau, Shenzhen and Zhuhai Health Quarantine, Animal and Plant Quarantine and Food Safety Control Meeting in June. Food safety experts from the five places would participate in the meeting.

The Steering Group on Safe Food Supply to Hong Kong was set up under the co-operation framework signed by the HWFB and AQSIQ. To join with the Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine authorities in Guangdong, Shenzhen and Zhuhai, the Steering Group would implement the regulatory measures to ensure the safety of food supplying to Hong Kong.

Accompanying Mrs Yau to visit Beijing were the Director of Food and Environmental Hygiene, Mr Eddy Chan; the Controller of the Centre for Food Safety (CFS), Dr Mak Sin-ping; the Assistant Director of the CFS, Dr Constance Chan; and the Assistant Director of Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation, Dr Leung Siu-fai.



Ends/Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Issued at HKT 16:01

NNNN

12 Apr 2019