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China delays deadline for implementing food import rules after industry pushback

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China delays deadline for implementing food import rules after industry pushback

 

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FILE PHOTO: Beef steaks are placed for sale at a Sam's Club store of Wal-Mart in Beijing, China June 29, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo

 

BEIJING (Reuters) - China plans to delay a deadline for implementing new food import regulations by two years until Oct. 1 2019, a senior EU official said on Tuesday, following a lobbying effort by Europe and the United States amid concerns about disruption to trade.

 

The extension comes just days before the new rules, which are part of a drive by China to boost oversight of its sprawling food supply chain and announced in April 2016, were due to come into force.

 

Jerome Lepeintre, minister counsellor for health and food safety at the European Union delegation in Beijing, said he received official documents on Monday night confirming the decision to delay had been logged with the World Trade Organization (WTO), as required by global trade rules.

 

China's Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), the agency that oversees the safety of all imports, did not respond to a fax requesting comment from Reuters.

 

Lepeintre said the move was "very positive" and would give exporters time to comply with the regulations, which require all food imports to carry health certificates, even if the product is deemed low-risk.

 

European and U.S. government and trade officials have warned the rules would hamper billions of dollars of shipments to the world's No. 2 economy of everything from pasta to coffee and biscuits.

 

China has delayed enforcing other tough new trade regulations this year, including rules on the cross-border retail market and cyber security, after industry pushback.

 

(Reporting by Dominique Patton; additional reporting by Tony Munroe; Editing by Richard Pullin)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-09-26

 

After China poisoned thousands of pets and caused irreparable kidney damage to thousands of babies with the use of melamine in food products that were exported primarily to the US, I think their concerns are a little self-serving.   

 

 

2 hours ago, Credo said:

After China poisoned thousands of pets and caused irreparable kidney damage to thousands of babies with the use of melamine in food products that were exported primarily to the US, I think their concerns are a little self-serving.   

 

 

The article is about food imports, not exports from China and the issue you reference was about 9/10 years ago - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_adulteration_in_China and was a bigger problem internally than abroad.

 

I don't disagree however that their own standards and controls may be sorely lacking as I had personal experience of it when I worked there until a few years ago. If you had said they need to put their own house in order before enacting controls on imports than fair enough :thumbsup:

 

 

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