1 / 21

Canadian Approach to On-farm Food Safety

Canadian Approach to On-farm Food Safety. Its Evolution, Current Success & Future Challenges International Federation of Agricultural Producers 37th World Farmer's Congress 60 years of empowering farmers Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006 Albert Chambers, Consultant

gil
Télécharger la présentation

Canadian Approach to On-farm Food Safety

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Canadian Approach to On-farm Food Safety Its Evolution, Current Success & Future Challenges International Federation of Agricultural Producers 37th World Farmer's Congress 60 years of empowering farmers Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006 Albert Chambers, Consultant Canadian On-Farm Food Safety Working Group IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  2. Presentation Outline • Why on-farm food safety • Basic elements of the Canadian approach • Developing a commodity-specific program • Official Recognition • Collaborative Initiatives • Current Status • Future Challenges • Conclusion IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  3. Why On-farm Food Safety? • Four major drivers • Consumer concerns • Government initiatives • Customer demands • Competitor’s actions IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  4. Canadian Producers’ Options • Do nothing • Wait for governments to regulate • Let the downstream food industry dictate • Be proactive • 1990/95 – various commodity based initiatives • 1996 - national consensus achieved • 1997 - producers & government establish Canadian On-Farm Food Safety Program IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  5. Producer Objectives for On-Farm Food Safety Programs • Producer-led, national & accessible • Commodity-specific programs • HACCP-based & auditable • Consistent, modular & expandable • Recognized in Canada • Internationally accepted • Affordable IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  6. Creating an On-Farm Food Safety Program • Government & Producer cost shared (some recognition of “public benefit”) • Four Phase Process • Phase 1 - National Strategy • Phase 2 – Program Development • Phase 3 – Implementation • Phase 4 – Recognition IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  7. Phase 2 – Development Process • Adopt Codex HACCP Principles & approach • Assemble HACCP team (producers, experts & stakeholders) • Conduct hazard analysis • Create the tools farmers need • On-going Communications with stakeholders • Pilot Projects • Generic GPP’s & CPP’s & Record Keeping requirements • Pre-assessment guides & Audit checklists • Training materials (Producers & Auditors) IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  8. Phase 2 – Results • Commodity-specific Programs that are: • Rigorous & Technically Sound • HACCP-based & science-based • Designed with up & downstream input • Subject to peer & expert reviews • Transparent & open to information sharing (successes & failures) • “Producer friendly”, practical & consistent one to another • Auditable IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  9. HACCP-based On-Farm Programs • 29 Commodity-specific programs covering 99% of primary production • Livestock (8) - hogs, cattle, dairy, sheep, bison, cervids (deer/elk), veal & goats • Poultry (5) - hatching eggs, hatcheries, table eggs, chickens & turkeys • Horticulture (12) - fresh fruits/vegetables*, sprouts, mushrooms & herbs/spices • Grains, oilseeds, pulses & special crops (1) • Honey • Aquaculture (2) – finfish& shellfish *Horticulture subprograms: general, potatoes, bulb & root, leafy vegetables, tree & vine fruit, small fruit, fruiting vegetables, other vegetables, greenhouse production IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  10. Official Recognition • World’s First • Designed by Producers & Government • Based on a Federal/Provincial/Territorial Ministerial Agreement (2001) • Consistent with Codex concepts • Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) leadership with Provincial & Territorial Participation • Stepwise Process assesses • Technical Soundness • Administrative Effectiveness IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  11. Essential Program Components On-farm Requirements National Producer Organization Conformity Assessment Governance Resources Auditor Training Program Management Risk Management Official Recognition IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  12. Recognition - Technical Reviews • Part 1- Technical soundness • Rigorous Review of Hazard Analysis & Documents • Face to Face Meeting • Adjustments Requested & Resolved • Letter of Completion Issued by CFIA • Part 2 - Administrative Effectiveness • Considers Program management system & documentation, auditor training materials, conformity assessment system, etc • Face to Face Meeting • Adjustments requested & made • Letter of Non-Objection issued by CFIA IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  13. Recognition – Oversight Requirements • Of the Farm • Meet governments requirements based on their assessment of on-farm risks • Provides what is needed not some “ideal” • Minimum requirement of 8 year certification periods drive down costs with cycles of • Full systems audits • Supplier declaration & submission of self evaluation checklists • FSSSFSSS • Many programs exceed the minimum IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  14. Recognition – Oversight Requirements • Of the Program • Meet government requirements • Internal & 3rd party audits prior to official recognition • Cycle of internal audits & management reviews by NPO with reports to & reviews by CFIA (years 1 to 4) • 3rd party audit & CFIA review prior to decision on continued recognition (year 5) IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  15. COFFS Working Group - Results • Establishing common infrastructure to ensure program sustainability • Negotiation of Official Recognition • National Training Module for Auditors (completed 2002 & to be revised in 2006) • Insurance for On-Farm Auditors (completed) • Templates for Program Management Systems (completed) • Risk Management Planning Guide for NPOs (completed) • Medicated Feeds Module to meet proposed regulations (in progress) • National Certification Body Business Plan (completed) IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  16. Feed mills Grain elevators Trucking Railways Food distribution & storage Fresh produce packers & distributors Bottled Water Ice making Packaging materials Grocery warehouse/ distribution Grocery stores Foodservice (volume feeding) Importers Other HACCP or HACCP-based Industry Programs – Following On-Farm Lead IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  17. Producer Involvement in Supply Chain Initiatives • A lead role for primary producers along with input suppliers, processors, manufacturers, distributors & final marketers in: • Canadian Partnership for Consumer Food Safety Education (consumer education) • ATQ, CCIA & CLIA (developing animal ID & traceability initiatives) • CAN-TRACE (developing a national traceability data standard) • Canadian Supply Chain Food Safety Coalition (liaison with governments on policy & regulations) • Canadian stakeholder group on ISO 22000 series of standards (ensuring HACCP-based programs fit) IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  18. Future Challenges • Implementation • 200,000+ farms on one or more programs • Infrastructure • Sustainable & affordable mechanisms • Full acceptance as “public good” • International Recognition • Customers, Governments, ISO 22000, etc • Adaptation & Expansion • Other management systems (environment, animal welfare, etc.) IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  19. Preliminary International Lessons • Farm organization leadership is critical • Foundation based on internationally accepted approaches (e.g. Codex HACCP, ISO, etc) • Generic, national programs, accessible to all sizes of farms • Industry/government partnership & acceptance as “public good” • Supply chain collaboration • Ready when market requires • Drive costs out of the system – use what is needed IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  20. Canadian Approach to Food Safety More Information in French and English on: • Canadian On-Farm Food Safety Working Group • www.onfarmfoodsafety.ca • Canadian Food Safety & Quality Program • www.agr.ca/fd_al_e.phb • CFIA led Official Recognition • www.inspection.gc.ca (under food safety) • Canadian Supply Chain Food Safety Coalition • www.foodsafetycoalition.ca • Canadian Partnership for Consumer Food Safety Education • www.canfightbac.org • Canadian Traceability Initiative • www.can-trace.org IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

  21. Canadian Approach to On-Farm Food Safety • A Producer-led Initiative • A Successful Industry/Government Partnership • A World Leader IFAP – 37th World Congress Seoul, South Korea 19 May 2006

More Related