"EU should issue a warning to the exporter and give it reasonable time to remove the inadequacies before delisting the company," said A Jayathilak, Chairman of the Marine Products Export Development Authority (MPEDA). He was chairing the EU-India Shrimp Dialogue, organized in association with the Embassy of the Netherlands.
The session was part of the three-day 21stIndia International Seafood Show 2018 organised jointly by the MPEDA and Seafood Export Association of India (SEAI) from January 27 to 29 here.
Jayathilak described as unfair the EUs decision to increase the sample size from 10 per cent to 50 per cent for testing seafood consignments from India, while keeping it at 10 per cent for other countries.
Endorsing Dr Jayathilaks pleas, SEAI General Secretary Elias Sait said the sample size was being kept at 10 per cent even for Vietnam and Bangladesh, whose consignments had also failed food safety tests.
But Sait said these countries could not be compared in terms of numbers of failed samples as Indias volume of export was high and the sample size was five times higher.
Pointing to the case of a recently blacklisted exporter, Sait said the company was suffering despite the fact that about 600 consignments sent by it to the EU over several years were in perfect order.
EU had brought his entire business, involving an investment of Rs 50 crore, to a standstill by delisting his company after one of his consignments failed a quality test, he said.
Some of the blacklisting was done on the basis of miniscule variations from the food quality benchmark, he said, adding that he wanted relisting to take place in suitable cases within a short time.
Willem Van Der Pijl, representing the Seafood Trade Intelligence Portal (STIP), moderated the discussion.
Jayathilak and Sait said the first India-EU Shrimp Dialogue provided a forum for a "free, frank and candid" discussion aimed at finding a solution to the problems being faced by all stakeholders.
He made the statement in response to concerns raised by seafood associations of Kerala and West Bengal that a number of companies, delisted by EU due to wrong testing by labs in importing countries, were suffering for no fault of theirs.
A number of consignments rejected by importing countries in Europe, for allegedly containing banned antibiotics and chemical substances beyond permissible limits, were found to be in order during further tests conducted in Indian laboratories, these associations said.
A representative of farmers involved in shrimp farming suggested that quality tests should be conducted at the farm level rather than when the processing was over, adding that farmers were blamed even in cases where the processing sector was at fault.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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