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News Releases


No. 01/08
January 3, 2008
AMBASSADOR BRUTON CALLS FOR A COMMON SENSE APPROACH
TO FOOD SAFETY ISSUES
Ambassador
John Bruton, Head of the EU Commission Delegation to the
United States, said today that the European Union and
the United States should pool resources as much as
possible to ensure that
consumers in the transatlantic
marketplace get the safest and highest-quality
food and
that taxpayer dollars and euros are used
cost-effectively.
"We should work to eliminate rules and regulations that
hinder perfectly good products from crossing the
Atlantic. There will always be some differences, and the
US has raised valid concerns about some EU rules. But
this is a two-way street.
"At a time when the European Commission is working hard
to find solutions for American food and feed exporters
wishing to market their products in Europe, I am
surprised that none of the planned actions listed on the
US regulatory agenda for the first part of 2008
addresses the concerns European exporters have about
entering the US market."
Ambassador Bruton was referring to the latest
semi-annual regulatory agenda published in December and
covering the planned activities of US departments and
agencies for the next six to twelve months. Ambassador
Bruton said he hoped inconsistencies could be ironed out
in the course of 2008.
"For example, the EU and the US worked together in
2005 in the World Animal Health Organization to forge a
global agreement and recognition of the fact that
boneless beef, under 30 months of age, does not pose any
BSE (‘mad cow’) risk. This very agreement is used to
promote US beef exports in Asia; yet, at the start of
2008, EU exports of boneless beef under 30 months to the
USA are still blocked - supposedly because of BSE. This
is a double standard.
"We need to make more progress towards equivalence in
the meat sector. Since a bilateral
EU/US Veterinary
Agreement was signed some ten years ago, we’ve made
incremental steps in the right direction but we need to
move more quickly toward risk-based inspections and away
from the costly blanket approach. It is hard to see why
USDA inspectors will be spending more than 300 days
between January and September inspecting European meat
plants, including 40 days in Denmark, which is half the
size of Maine. By contrast, in the spirit of our
agreement, EU inspectors will spend only about 30 days
in the US during this period.
"The right of the US to inspect is not in question but
some consistency in approach and more focus on where the
risks are coming from would be welcome. We have a world
class food safety system in Europe and these regulatory
barriers only serve to add cost and deprive American
consumers of the access and choice to the wide range of
high-quality European products. If we could find a way
of trusting one another's respective systems, we could
save precious resources. We need to let common sense
prevail to the benefit of consumers on both sides of the
Atlantic."

Further Contact Information:
Press and Public Diplomacy
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
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