Seafood export ban likely to stay
KARACHI: Seafood exports to the European Union are likely to continue suffering for an indefinite period as the federal authorities have refused to give a green signal to the seafood processing factories on grounds that they have not yet removed deficiencies.
A senior official rejected claims made by the seafood exporters last week that 11 seafood processing factories had invested more than Rs50 million to remove deficiencies cited in the final report of the EUs Food and Veterinary Office (FVO) and said only concrete initiatives on the part of processing factories could lift the ban.
We are not satisfied as yet. Out of the 11 seafood processing factories, most have not come up with the desired measures, said Dr Hayat Muhammad Khan, Federal Fisheries Commissioner. We even visited two factories on Wednesday but didnt find them up to the mark. The MFD (Marine Fisheries Department) inspection team is authorised to give quality certification and has marked most of the seafood companies below quality standards.
Hayat said the federal government had also engaged experts from the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), who had expressed dissatisfaction over conditions at the seafood processing factories, which had further given credence to the authoritys stance.
We are not concerned about the fishing season, said the fisheries commissioner. What we are concerned about is improving quality standards. The seafood companies should remove deficiencies to resume exports to European countries. The fisheries commissioners comments came at a time when more than 100,000 fishermen braced themselves for the fishing season which resumed in August after a two-month gap due to the fish breeding season.
If the ban continues, exporters fear fishermen along with the industry would be the losers, as they would not be able to sell their sea catch at better prices to the processing factories.
The government in March 2007 received an initial finding from the EU, which informed Pakistani authorities about deficiencies in the production chain, which led to delisting of all seafood processing factories on quality control grounds, putting a ban on the countrys $80 million exports.
However, in the final report released recently, the EU has marked the grey areas where MFD failed to ensure implementation on previous quality control recommendations, which led to the suspension of seafood exports to the 27-nation European bloc in the first place early this year.
More than four months have elapsed and still fundamental quality standard concerns remain to be resolved.
The factories have been standardised as per EU requirements and the authorities reservations are baseless, said Akhlaq Hussain of Akhlaq Enterprises, one of the largest Pakistani shrimp exporter to the EU.
Even my factory was inspected a couple of days back by government authorities and the team showed their satisfaction, finding everything upto mark. Then how comes such change in the authoritys stance in a flash?
He said UNIDO was not mandated to check quality standards at the factories and the fisheries department was hiding its own deficiencies and short comings in the guise of objections from the FVO.
Figures compiled by the State Bank suggested seafood export earnings at $160 million by June 2006 up from $138.94 million earnings during 2004-05, as EU countries remained the largest importers of Pakistani seafood products.
The EU imports more than 60 per cent of its total seafood from Pakistan; the 27-nation block has been the largest single buyer of Pakistani seafood for more than two decades.
http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=66721