Report shows progress on food safety projects

Gender equality, climate change and technology were key themes in a network that tries to ensure safe trade, according to an annual report.

The Standards and Trade Development Facility (STDF) aims to improve sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) capacity in developing and least developed countries.

STDF was established by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), World Organisation for Animal Health, the World Bank Group, World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Trade Organization (WTO).

“Compliance with SPS requirements is already a major challenge for many developing countries. Climate change is making this even more difficult. Strengthening developing countries’ SPS systems, including capacities to monitor and control new pests and diseases, is more important than ever and will contribute to increased food production and food security,” said Melvin Spreij, head of the STDF.

Project examples
STDF works with government institutions, international organizations and development partners in different sectors to enhance compliance with international food safety, animal and plant health standards and facilitate safe food trade.

The annual report highlights projects such as improving the safety and quality of Sudan’s sesame seeds; enhancing compliance with phytosanitary measures in Uganda’s fruit and vegetable sectors; promoting good agricultural practices in Tajikistan’s honey and apricot value chains; and increasing fish exports from the Solomon Islands.

Stories were shared from Djibouti, India and Tanzania, highlighting results that can be achieved when government authorities and the private sector work together on trade. Ongoing projects include enhancing food safety capacity of the pepper value chain in Jamaica and piloting a voluntary third party assurance (vTPA) program in East Africa.

STDF members also continued learning about the use of data-driven approaches to boost safe trade and accelerate economic growth, including electronic phytosanitary certificates.

Projects help to improve compliance with international standards within and across countries and regions. Some initiatives struggled to catch up on delays made worse by the pandemic. In certain cases, staff turnover caused additional challenges for in-country commitment and political instability was an issue in some parts of West Africa.

Program financing
Eight projects were approved while another 17 are ongoing. Fifteen donors contributed more than $6.5 million in funding. The next deadline to submit project funding proposals is Aug. 11 and these will be considered by STDF in November 2023. Pending initiatives include reducing histamine in tuna in Indonesia and managing aflatoxins in maize in Uganda.

“The STDF is working to create a world where food traded is safe and secure for all, and also to facilitate the compliance of relevant standards by developing countries’ exports,” said Jean-Marie Paugam, WTO Deputy Director-General. 

In May 2023, Germany’s Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture announced a contribution of €150,000 ($165,000) to the STDF.

Bettina Waldmann said: “By helping developing countries tackle sanitary and phytosanitary challenges, we are making a contribution to improving SPS systems and ensuring safe agricultural food trade globally. Building SPS capacity is key to raising food security levels, protecting the environment and securing people’s livelihoods.”

Spreij said the support would benefit producers, traders and governments along global and regional value chains, helping them raise export revenues, income levels and living standards. 

Money will be used to strengthen the ability of small-scale farmers, producers and traders to gain and maintain access to markets for food and agriculture products through SPS projects, knowledge sharing, and monitoring and evaluation of results.

(To sign up for a free subscription to Food Safety News, click here.)

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Meghan Markle donates baby clothing to domestic violence charity during International Women's Day visit thumbnail

Meghan Markle donates baby clothing to domestic violence charity during International Women’s Day visit

Meghan Markle and female staff at Archewell spent International Women's Day at a Harvest Home venue, a charity that support pregnant domestic violence victims - and the kind Duchess caringly folded the baby clothing she had donated during the visit.Details of Meghan's trip were publicised on Thursday following her appearance, but Archewell have now released images
Read More
Queensland's Gold Coast Health deploys Rauland's Concierge platform to reduce contact in COVID-19 wards thumbnail

Queensland’s Gold Coast Health deploys Rauland’s Concierge platform to reduce contact in COVID-19 wards

Queensland's Gold Coast Health has set up a bedside terminal solution by health IT provider Rauland Australia to reduce physical interactions in its COVID-19 ward.  WHAT IT DOES Rauland's Concierge platform combines Siemens HiMed bedside terminals and Rauland’s software and services. It supports patient engagement with features including telehealth, on-demand patient education, patient information, electronic…
Read More
CISA to focus on greater accountability across the cybersecurity ecosystem thumbnail

CISA to focus on greater accountability across the cybersecurity ecosystem

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is taking new actions and making long-term investments to ensure cross-sector collaboration and drive security at scale, officials say.  WHY IT MATTERS With its new FY 2024-2026 strategic plan released Aug. 4, the national cybersecurity group aims to address immediate cybersecurity threats and harden systems against attack.  The agency says cyber
Read More
Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’ thumbnail

Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’

April 4 This week on the KFF Health News Minute: A tech-powered, faster way to diagnose the disease that causes diabetes-related blindness, and emerging research on alcohol consumption and women’s risks.   March 28 This week on the KFF Health News Minute: Questions around abortion rights could be on the ballot in more than a dozen
Read More
Sameer Wankhede's sister Yasmeen files criminal defamation suit against Nawab Malik thumbnail

Sameer Wankhede’s sister Yasmeen files criminal defamation suit against Nawab Malik

Yasmeen Wankhede, the sister of NCB zonal director Sameer Wankhede, has filed a criminal defamation suit against Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik. NCB Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede's sister Yasmeen (Photo: Sameer Shanbhag)Yasmeen Wankhede, the sister of Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) zonal director Sameer Wankhede, on Saturday filed a criminal defamation suit against Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik.…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share