Japanese company decries cumbersome sampling of seafood imports into Vietnam

Mar 16th at 13:51
16-03-2018 13:51:15+07:00

Japanese company decries cumbersome sampling of seafood imports into Vietnam

A Japanese food importer in Vietnam has called for improvements to the current procedures for sampling imports, which places a burden on companies with a clean record.

Taking samples of every import is wasteful and unnecessary, especially when it involves companies that has never failed a test, the complaint said.

Ho Chi Minh City-based Lotus Group, a Japan-invested company specializing in food imports and restaurant franchising, mentioned Vietnam’s red tape in food import inspection on Wednesday during a meeting with the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO).

The company said it imports an average of 50 kilograms of fresh seafood every two days to supply its Japanese restaurants in Vietnam.

Despite passing every inspection with flying colors, a Lotus Group representative said the company has been subject to sampling for each of its shipments, without exception.

“A restaurant-quality fish weighs about five kilograms. By taking away one kilogram for sampling, authorities make an entire fish nearly unusable,” the representative said.

“For importers with a clean record, sampling should be less frequent,” he suggested.

According to the representative, even in Japan, companies with a good history of following food safety regulations are subject to only one random sampling each year.

Not only is food inspection in Vietnam more frequent, it also takes longer, a JETRO official pointed out.

Inspection of imported meat can take up to a full week to complete, while vegetables take four days to be sampled and cleared.

This process raises the costs of preserving the items in cold storage, while also reducing the quality of the food, the JETRO official explained.

Despite such lenghthy inspections, dirty food remains an unresolved issue in Vietnam, where thousands fall ill every year from food poisoning, according to Ministry of Health figures.

tuoitrenews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

​Titanium extraction planning causes multiple problems in Vietnamese province

Authorities in a coastal region of south-central Vietnam have said that the planned areas for extracting a type of metal called titanium are posing a number of...

$4.5m for national trade promotion

The national trade promotion programme in 2018 will support key sectors, markets and prioritise the development of brand names of some key products every year.

New projects in pipeline for Hoa Lac High-Tech Park

A number of new foreign-invested projects are expected to be licensed in Hoa Lac High-Tech Park (HHTP) in Hanoi.

Cargill licensed to develop animal feed project in Bac Ninh

US-invested Cargill Vietnam—one of the three largest animal feed producers in the country—has been licensed to build a new animal feed project in the northern...

Seminar talks fruit, veg exports

Viet Nam’s fruit and vegetable exports are expected to top US$4.5 billion by 2020, with fruits accounting for $3.6 billion, according to the Crop Production...

City promotes supply chain links

Enhancing supply chain linkages is one of the key measures for the sustainable development of industry, including supporting industries, an expo heard in HCM City...

HCM City hosts 3 int’l farm expos

The first International Exhibition & Conference for Horticultural and Floricultural Production and Processing Technology (Hortex Vietnam) and the first...

Japan bank mulls PetroVietnam plan

The Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) is considering funding the Block B&52/97 project of the Viet Nam Oil and Gas Group (PetrolVietnam) with loans...

Supporting industries urged to improve competitiveness

Vietnamese companies operating in the supporting industry need to increase competitiveness to be able to enter global supply chains, experts said at a seminar held...

Electronics industry needs development: Seminar

The consumer electronics industry has developed strongly in recent years but a lot more needs to be done to ensure further development.


MOST READ


Back To Top