Workers process shrimps at a seafood plant in the Mekong Delta
Vietnam’s efforts to repair its damaged seafood reputation
after several rejections over quality concerns are not likely to end anytime
soon as the industry is still divided over who must take responsibility for
the fiasco.
The agriculture ministry in August
2011 issued a notice asking export companies to submit samples for testing
before shipping besides performing their own regular tests on the input.
But nearly two years later, the
measure has not been well received with exporters blaming the problem on
farmers, according to a recent report in the Thoi bao Kinh te
The companies say testing samples
will not help improve seafood quality and hygiene, and that they do not want
be the one fixing the problems created at seafood farms.
Figures from the ministry show that
In the last three years, the EU found
112 shipments from
Nguyen Hai Trieu, director of Gio Moi
Seafood, an exporter in
Trieu said the complaints are not
about unhygienic processing at factories, but about the materials used by
farmers.
“The regulation only taps the top of
the problem,” he said, adding that in order to be licensed to export seafood
to big markets like
Trieu said
Phan Thanh Chien, general director of
Hai Viet, a seafood exporter in the southern beach town of
Chien said his company does not
produce antibiotics, for example, or add them to the products, but had to
spend VND9 billion (US$427,860) on quality checks last year, one-third of it
on tests conducted by the ministry.
Chien said given the global
competition, “the government should have helped with reducing our expenses.”
Other members of the Vietnam
Association of Seafood Exporters and Processors also say the ministry is
creating more red tape that affects their competitiveness.
Nguyen Huu Dung, vice chairman of the
association, said he supported the idea from the beginning, but businesses
were not given many chances to discuss the measure before it was implemented.
The regulations were drafted by the
ministry’s National Agro-Forestry-Fisheries Quality Assurance Department
(Nafiqad), the country’s only agency monitoring and granting licenses for
seafood imports and exports.
Dung said the regulations heavily
affected the seafood industry, which is a major foreign currency earner, but
Nafiqad only gave companies one week to comment on them and discussions
lasted just over an hour. He noted that the department had spent more than 18
months writing the regulations, studying similar regulations in other
countries.
Nguyen Nhu Tiep, head of the
department, said he did not personally decide on the necessity of the tests
or the number of tests that need to be done. He had ordered them based on foreign
customers’ demands.
“As long as a company’s shipments
show improvement, I would reduce the tests required on its other products,”
Tiep said.
But former deputy agriculture
minister Nguyen Thi Hong Minh also said focusing on the exporters is not
effective management.
“The processing stage at companies is
pretty alright now, so I think the ministry should shift its focus to fishing
and farming activities to solve the problem at its root,” Minh told Thoi bao Kinh te
She said that when she was still in
office in 2007, the ministry had received support from many Danish government
projects to train farmers breeding fish to adopt safety practices.
The projects organized farmers into
cooperatives and thus made it easy to supervise them, she said.
“But now after many years, I look at
it and see that things have gone back to the situation where farmers breed
whatever they want, and use whatever animal feed and chemicals they want.”
Thanh Nien News
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Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 6, 2013
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