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Thursday, January 15, 2009 Food safety
body took 'correct' action to manage dioxin crisis
Source of Article: http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/0115/1231974456144.html SEÁN MacCONNELL, Agriculture
Correspondent THE MEASURES taken by the Food Safety Authority of Ireland in managing the
dioxin scare were “appropriate, proportionate and correct”, its deputy chief
executive, Alan Reilly, said yesterday. He told the Joint Oireachtas Committee on
Agriculture that had the recall of pork products not been ordered, “Dioxin experts told us wrappers could not have been the cause.They would have to be heated at levels of 200
degrees centigrade plus and this would have turned the feed into toast. The
source was transformer oil,” he said. Mr Reilly was
asked by members of the committee, which is investigating the crisis, to
defend the recall decision which has cost over €180 million. He said three reasons governed this decision, the first being it was
essential to limit consumer exposure to contaminated products to the shortest
possible time period. The second was that the level of dioxins found in the pork and animal feed
were well in excess of legal limits. Under EU regulations they were illegal
and could not have remained on the market. The third reason was it was not possible to distinguish between
contaminated and uncontaminated products in about 98 per cent of the national
pork throughput. Reminding the committee that pork was back on the shelves
within a week, he said if all pork had been left on the shelves, it would
have been impossible to trace contaminated products. “ Dr Reilly said until the scare, dioxin contamination was unlikely to be a
risk assessment in the context of the HACCP (hazard analysis and critical
control point systems) systems governing food production. “From now on, the
FSAI would expect dioxins to be a hazard that is actively controlled in meat
and meat products by a combination of supplier control and testing by food
business operators,” he said. He said the authority had responsibility from the farm gate onwards. It
did not have responsibility for animal feed or animal health controls, which
were enforced by the Department of Agriculture and which required the HACCP
system to be used. During the crisis, he said, all businesses involved had the requirements
in place that aided the tracing of feed and animals. Dr Claudia Heppner of the European Food Safety Authority said it had given
its risk assessment on the dangers posed in the crisis and it was not up to
the European authority to say if the recall decision was proportionate or
not. The investigation continues today. This article appears in the print edition of the
Irish Times |
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