Home Health & Living Food export rejection: NAFDAC solicits freight forwarders, freight consolidators’ support

Food export rejection: NAFDAC solicits freight forwarders, freight consolidators’ support

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National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has intensified efforts to bring all the major stakeholders in the exports trade at the nation’s ports to align with the appropriate electronic channel to obtain export certification.

To this end, the agency has called for the collaboration of the various trade groups in the export business on the need to put an end to rejection of food exports from Nigeria in Europe and the United States of America.

At a stakeholder meeting with the critical trade groups at the ports, NAFDAC\s Director General, Prof Mojisola Adeyeye implored the clearing agents to propagate to the various exporters, cargo operators and handlers the need to align with the guidelines put in place by the agency and appropriate regulatory channels for export certification with a view to putting a stop to the  embarrassment that rejection of food exports from Nigeria more often than not, bring to the country and the huge losses incurred by the exporters.

In line with the Federal Government policy on diversifying the economy through the non-oil export sector and with the policy initiative on the Presidential Enabling Business Executive Council (PEBEC), Adeyeye pointed out that NAFDAC, as one of the key drivers of the initiative, has stepped up its processes and procedures towards ensuring that all NAFDAC regulated products meant for export meet the required standard acceptable at national and international markets especially with the specifications of buying country

She disclosed that this is done through an improved process of documentation, laboratory analysis, inspection, registration and certification before they are exported.

The meeting with freight forwarders, freight consolidators, and clearing agents freight consolidators in export business was a follow-up to the one the agency had with pre-shipment agents about a month ago.

The DG, who was represented by the agency’s Head of Export Division, Ports Inspection Directorate, Mrs. Oluwaseyi Sanwo-Olu called on the export stakeholders of the agency regulated products for effective collaboration with the regulatory authority to complement its robust regulatory policies geared toward understanding the NAFDAC export processes. ‘’The main objective is collaboration to safeguard a unified exportation procedure and zero rejects of Nigeria export products’’, she explained.

She noted that the regulatory policy of the agency is geared towards the protection of consumers and promoting public health, by ensuring that regulated products are of good quality, safe, efficacious, wholesome, and accepted in the global market.

‘’We recognise and appreciate the role of each of the export facilitation stakeholders namely consolidators, freight forwarders, clearing agents, members of the Association of Nigeria Customs Licensed Agents, National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders, Association of Nigeria licensed custom Agent, National Association of Freight Forwarders and Air Consolidators, etc. here represented today as main actors in the export chain’’, Adeyeye said, stressing that it is their obligation to sensitise and enlighten the exporters on NAFDAC processes and procedures as well.

She pointed out that the coming together by the agency and port operators would help make the trade of the non-oil sector be better, more robust, and more consultative.

According to the NAFDAC boss, the following are the agency’s expectations from consolidators of its regulated products.

  • Freight consolidators should be well informed on the nature of the products they are handling and how to keep the product’s integrity intact.
  • Guide their clients (exporters) to always factor in, time for processing of export certification in their timeline before planning the next exportation.
  • Comply with documentation requirements for NAFDAC regulated products before shipment.
  • Have a requisite understanding of quality, safety and standards of regulated product or consignment they are handling.
  • A good understanding of proper handling, use of approved packaging material, group-packaging of like products.
  • Understand the implication of forwarding and exporting products without recourse to NAFDAC processes and procedures.

She said they must always avoid cross-contamination of products (e.g., food products, cosmetics, chemicals), adding that cool temperature that does not allow microbes to grow must be maintained.

Adeyeye urged them to use quality finished and raw material, adding that they should also ensure that personnel handling processes are medically fit to avoid contamination.

She added that NAFDACs door is opened to trade, ’we encourage and support trade’’, adding that the NAFDAC Export certification channel is Customer friendly, easy to operate and timely.

According to her, the agency’s leverage is on the commitment to achieve zero export reject.

She said NAFDAC is sensitive to the peculiarity of export consignment at the MMIA and is willing to guide the erring exporters as well as streamline export requirements for such consignments hence the reason for relocating the Export Division of PID in NAFDAC to the newly built NAFDAC’s NAHCO at MMIA for easy accessibility to exporters of such consignments.

Adeyeye noted that the agency acknowledges the importance of having broader and deeper interactions and collaborations with sister agencies such as Standards Organization of Nigeria, Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service, Nigeria Export Promotion Council, and the Nigeria Custom Service, among others.

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