Food safety constitutes proper preparation, storage, and preservation of all foods. According to the United Nations Asian and Pacific Center for Agricultural Engineering and Machinery (APCAEM), an upsurge in international trade on agricultural products has made food safety a major concern. Furthermore, food safety is becoming a serious policy matter due to rigorous agricultural activities, pollution and man-made, and natural disasters. Markets are increasingly calling for an improvement in the quality and safety standards of food crops.
Producers must, thus, meet these requirements to gain the trust of consumers. However, in most countries, measures employed to achieve this are below par. An especially disturbing issue is that certification and standardization systems do not meet the criteria set by most markets. Therefore, governments and other policy makers should provide a platform to kick-start the implementation of internationally-accepted food safety standards.
Providing legal and infrastructural framework is a sure way of bringing local food safety closer to international standards. Examples of strong policy measures include adherence to international agreements, certification, ensuring that food moves directly from the farm to a consumer’s table, giving farmers incentives to produce safely, avoiding contamination of harvested produce and sponsoring awareness campaigns. Adherence to these policy guidelines ensures that a country remains competitiveness in the global food industry.
Works Cited
United Nations Asian and Pacific Center for Agricultural Engineering and Machinery. “Food Safety Issues in Agricultural Trade.” APCAEM Policy Brief 3 (2008): n. pag. Web.