Home / / Aquanews

Vietnam eligible to export catfish, fish products to US

Vietnam eligible to export catfish, fish products to US
Author: VNA
Publish date: Thursday. December 12th, 2019

Hanoi – The Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) under the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has recognised Vietnam as a country eligible to export Siluriformes fish (catfish, including tra fish) and fish products to the US.

The US Office of the Federal Register announced the FSIS’s legal notice on the determination on November 5.

Accordingly, FSIS has determined that Vietnam’s Siluriformes fish inspection system is equivalent to the system that the US has established under the Federal Meat Inspection Act and its implementing regulations. FSIS is amending the Siluriformes fish inspection regulations to list Vietnam as a country eligible to export Siluriformes fish and fish products to the US.

Under this final rule, only raw Siluriformes fish and fish products produced in certified Vietnamese establishments are eligible for export to the US market.

Aside from Vietnamese authorities’ certification, Siluriformes fish products exported from Vietnam will continue to be subject to re-inspection by FSIS at US points of entry for transportation damage, product and container defects, labeling, proper certification, general condition, and accurate count. 

In addition, FSIS will continue to conduct other types of re-inspection activities, such as taking product samples for laboratory analysis to detect drug and chemical residues and pathogens, as well as to identify product species and composition. Products that pass re-inspection will be stamped with the official mark of inspection and allowed to enter the US.

If they do not meet US requirements, they will be denied entry and within 45 days they must be exported to the country of origin, destroyed, or converted to animal food, depending on the violation.

From 2014 to 2018, 91.2 percent of total Siluriformes fish imports to the US were from Vietnam, according to FSIS.

Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Phung Duc Tien described the determination by the USDA as a positive result as it has recognised Vietnam’s efforts to fine-tune and implement its legal system for more than three years. This rule, together with positive signs in the market and rising demand for aquatic products at the end of the year, will create chances for Vietnam to boost aquatic product exports.

Nguyen Nhu Tiep, Director of the ministry’s National Agro-Forestry-Fisheries Quality Assurance Department, also believed that the US’s recognition is an important driving force for the sector to develop sustainably in the time ahead.

The move will support exports to not only the US but also other markets since it proves that Vietnam’s capacity for quality and food safety control in tra fish production chains has met one of the strictest requirements in the world, he added.

As required by the 2014 Farm Bill, the USDA launched an inspection programme for fish under the order Siluriformes in March 2016. This programme required that to continue exporting catfish, mostly tra fish, to the US, Vietnam had to build and organise its inspection system equivalent to the US’s in terms of three groups of criteria, namely the legal system on food quality and safety control; the law enforcement capacity of authorised agencies; and conditions for ensuring food safety and hygiene during the whole process from fry production, farming, transportation, process to export to the US.

In May 2018, an FSIS inspection team made a fact-finding trip to Vietnam and recognised that Vietnam’s inspection system in catfish production, processing and export completely meets the US’s regulations.

The draft rule was unveiled in September 2018 to collect public opinions and won a majority of support. The USDA announced the final rule on October 31.


Related news

Russia to Further Cut Fish Imports With New Crimean Processing Plant Russia to Further Cut Fish Imports With New Crimean Processing Plant

A new fish processing facility is to be launched on the Crimean peninsula in late 2017, allowing Russia to replace up to 19 per cent of its fish imports.

Wednesday. January 11th, 2017
Cambodia Planning For First Large-Scale Marine Fish Farm Cambodia Planning For First Large-Scale Marine Fish Farm

A proposal for the country’s first large-scale marine fish farm that would raise grouper, sea bass and other valuable dinner-table species has been sent to the

Wednesday. January 11th, 2017
Exports of Ecuadorian shrimp to Russia grow 90pc Exports of Ecuadorian shrimp to Russia grow 90pc

Exports of Ecuadorian shrimp to Russia grew 90 per cent over the same period in 2015, according to a report from the Ecuadorian Trade Office in Moscow.

Thursday. February 9th, 2017
Australia softens ban on shrimp import Australia softens ban on shrimp import

The Vietnam Trade Office in Australia reported that the Australian Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources has softened the temporary ban on imports of raw

Thursday. February 9th, 2017
New Zealand king salmon farmers prepare for aquaculture boom New Zealand king salmon farmers prepare for aquaculture boom

New Zealand king salmon farmers are experiencing a surge in demand as other key international markets continue to wrestle with sea lice infestations

Thursday. February 9th, 2017