Showing posts with label importers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label importers. Show all posts

Friday, 11 April 2014

FOOD REGULATIONS: New CFIA rules require federal licences for all Canadian food firms

New CFIA rules require federal licences for all Canadian food firms

Part of modernization program at federal inspection agency that will bring sweeping changes to industry

Antico Food Production
All food producers in Canada will need a federal licence when new CFIA regulations launch in 2015. PHOTO Lassonde
TORONTO—Sweeping regulatory changes and increased federal oversight are around the corner for food and beverage companies in Canada, and an industry expert warns unprepared firms will face costly headaches down the road.
Enforced by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), the changes coming down the pipeline will see mandatory federal licensing for all food makers, importers and exporters in the country.
A standardized set of inspection criteria for all food products, as well as an expanded list of goods that fall under the watchful eye of inspectors, are also on the way.
Wrapped up under the guise of the CFIA’s inspection modernization efforts, the new regulations—replacing some dating back to the 1940s—will help bring the department into line with trading partners like the United States.
“They call it modernization, (but) it’s really kind of an alignment with other key government agencies to transform the way that they do business today,” said Candace Sider, director of regulatory affairs with customs brokerage and trade consultancy Livingston International Inc.
Ushered in with the Safe Food for Canadians Act in 2012, the modernization program calls for all companies to develop and implement scalable preventative control plans.
“In the broader sense, the key elements of that safe foods plan is the requirement for quality management, quality control programs, safety programs, prevention control plans, food traceability (and) mandatory record keeping requirements,” Sider said.
Up until now, such programs were voluntary.
“I suspect that many companies already have, to some degree, a lot of these requirements already in place,” Sider said of the new control plans.
“(That’s) not to say that they’re not going to need to go back and vet that program that they have in place and really ensure that what they’re documenting or what their processes are that they’re following, (are) effective.”
Another component of modernization is increased CFIA oversight and inspection that will see a single model used across the board.
“What (that) allows us to do is to bring a bit more structure and transparency to how we are determining risk and how we’re going to allocate our resources,” said Colleen Barnes, executive director of modernization with the CFIA.
“Before, we were focused on (certain) commodities … but that wasn’t necessarily where the risk is, so we wanted to get to a framework approach that allows us to be more structured.”
Previously, the agency focused on specific food products for inspection—namely meats and dairy—for inspection, and didn’t stray too far from the same food products.
The new, all-encompassing regulations help the CFIA target specific food groups for assessment in any given year, rather than sticking to the same ones year after year.
“This new approach we have developed is going to allow us to be a lot more standard and consistent in our approach to oversight,” Barnes said.
But perhaps the biggest change coming with the program is the requirement for all food makers, importers and exporters to hold a federal licence.
Currently, only those importing meat, fish, dairy and eggs are regulated by the CFIA.
The new licence will apply to all other food commodities in the country, including baked goods and snack foods; infant formula and meal replacements; and coffee and spices.
“We don’t necessarily have much intel on how to reach those (companies) making cookies or cake mixes or all those processed products,” Barnes said. “A licence for everyone means that we’ll be able to reach out when there are food safety issues and know who is making what in this country and who is bringing what in.”
In short, she said, the agency will soon be able to keep an eye on firms stocking the “middle of the grocery store.”
“It’s an expansion across all food commodities, not just those certain ones that we had registered in the past,” she said.
“We need to know who is doing what in Canada (and) having a licensing regime allows us to get a really good handle on who’s importing food, who’s exporting it and who’s making food that’s crossing provincial borders.”
What that means for companies, though, remains unseen, and it will be up to management to decide how to meet those obligations with the CFIA while protecting their operations.
“In some cases, (a company) might have five or six different locations,” Sider said. “They may not choose to have one federal licence number for all locations, because the concern is, in the event of non-compliance, that would affect all locations rather than just one.
“So they may need to really think that through and make some decisions in terms of what’s the best strategy for them and for their business.”
Formal regulations won’t be in place until 2015, but Sider said that doesn’t mean firms have a year to be complacent.
“That’s to give companies time to align (with) the new set of requirements to make sure that if there are changes that they need to (make) internally … before they actually enforce the regulations,” she said.
“Don’t wait until the regulations are due to be enforced or implemented; there’s a lot that (industry) can do now to prepare for the implementation and enforcement of the new regulations.”
That includes conducting a gap assessment to ensure internal policies measure up with federal rules, Sider said.
“There are situations where some companies have a particular quality program in place today,” she continued, and there is fear in the industry that those programs may not be recognized under new regulations.
“We need to go back and review that in a much broader detail to see what in fact has CFIA come out with in terms of what they will recognize as meeting the requirements of the new food safety plan, or is if there’s additional work that needs to be done by importers, exports and manufacturers,” she said.
“I think it’s important to recognize the CFIA is really committed to doing it right—making sure they get it right so that they don’t implement changes that would really impact (industry) … but they also want to ensure that whatever food comes into the country is safe.”

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Pizza lovers in Canada rejoice: Dairy farmers clear path for imported mozzarella


Here is an article in the Globe and Mail relating to our struggles in the pizza trade.  Ottawa and Canadian dairy farmers have bowed to pressure from the fast-food industry and will let thousands of pizza restaurants buy heavily discounted mozzarella cheese.

The move, announced Wednesday, potentially creates a new hole in the protective wall that surrounds the country’s supply-managed dairy industry, which keeps prices artificially high and bans most imports.
McCain Foods Ltd. and other Canadian frozen pizza makers have for years been able to buy mozzarella at world prices, which are roughly 30 per cent cheaper than in Canada. McCain had warned it wouldn't be able to survive without the concession.
The discount has been a long-standing irritant of the restaurant industry, which complained that it’s competing for the same consumers with one arm tied behind its back. Mozzarella can account for 70 per cent of the cost of the ingredients of a pizza.
The Canadian Dairy Commission said it will create a new class of milk for mozzarella cheese effective June 1 that will substantially lower prices paid by restaurants making fresh pizza.
The dairy industry has been fighting a flood of foreign mozzarella, imported in duty-free packages bundled with pepperoni to avoid Canada’s 245.5-per-cent tariff on cheese.
“It looks like the farmers have raised the white flag,” said James McIlroy, a Toronto-based international trade consultant.
Mr. McIlroy added that he didn’t see how the government would prevent discounted cheese from finding its way to consumers and other unauthorized buyers.
The dairy industry has been at odds with Pizza Pizza Ltd., which figured out that it could buy mozzarella in conveniently packaged cheese-and-pepperoni pizza topping kits in the United States.
Dairy farmers estimate that as much as 4,000 tonnes a year of U.S. mozzarella is now finding its way into Canada in duty-free kits, representing as much as 12 per cent of the fresh pizza cheese market.
The importer and the dairy industry are now contesting those imports before the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, arguing they are an effort to skirt the tariff.
Jacques Laforge, chief executive of the CDC, said the discount could be worth as much as $25-million to $27-million a year, and perhaps more if the lower price stimulates higher demand for pizza.
“If they sell more pizza, it reduces the cost to producers,” Mr. Laforge said in an interview. “It’s a win-win.”
But Mr. Laforge said restaurants, which will have to register with the dairy commission to get the special price, will still pay more than frozen pizza makers.
And consumers won’t get any break at all on the mozzarella they buy at the grocery store.
Garth Whyte, president and chief executive of the Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association, said the new price “responds to longstanding concerns” and he applauded the dairy industry’s willingness to move.
Frank Morra, owner of Ragazzi Pizza Co., in Vancouver, estimates that mozzarella cheese accounts for about two-thirds of the cost of ingredients that go into his restaurant’s large 17-inch margherita pizza with mozzarella, tomato sauce and fresh basil. The ingredients on that pizza cost roughly $7 in total, of which $4.62 would be the cheese. “We give a healthy portion of cheese,” Mr. Morra said.
He sells the large margherita pizza for $15.45 plus tax, noting that he has to pay wages and incurs many other expenses.
Mr. Morra said he plans to cancel a price increase planned for the fall. He said cheese prices have steadily escalated over the past four years for him, and he’s resisted raising prices. Assuming he gets savings from lower-priced cheese, he said won’t raise menu prices.