UK: FSA plans more self-regulation on inspections

By Sam Webb | 9 January 2012

The UK's Food Standards Agency is considering plans to reduce the type and frequency of inspections in a bid to target the worst offenders.

The food safety body is considering implementing "earned recognition", where regulators recognise "sustained compliance" from businesses and reduce inspections.

The move, the FSA says, will allow inspectors from local authorities to focus resources on high-risk, non-compliant businesses. It will also use data from third-party assurance schemes in lieu of official inspections, as they often reproduce official controls, doubling the burden of inspection on a company.

It already uses this approach in primary production and the dairy sector and wishes to extend it to suppliers and supermarkets.

An FSA spokesperson said the agency has commissioned research with consumers to find out their views on the proposed changes and expects to publish it soon.

The next step, it says, will be to pilot a number of schemes with local authorities.

The proposals have been welcomed by the Food and Drink Federation (FDF), which represents manufacturers. Director of food safety and science Barbara Gallani said: “Regulation is important in the food and drink industry to ensure food safety and standards.  FDF will continue to champion proportionate effective regulation to support these ends but more must be done to raise standards in order to deliver consistent and targeted enforcement to the areas of greatest risk. 

"Food and drink businesses will fully support a regulatory and enforcement regime on this basis, and that ensures a level playing field and recognition for those responsible businesses that do invest in compliance with tough sanctions against non-compliant businesses.

“We believe there is a real opportunity to reduce the burden of regulation in the food and drink sector through more effective enforcement."

Sectors: Food safety

Companies: FDF

View next/previous articles

Currently reading -

UK: FSA plans more self-regulation on inspections

There are currently no comments on this article

Be the first to comment on this article

Related research

Health and Wellness - United Kingdom

The economic recession in the UK in 2009 took its toll on health and wellness sales. 2009 saw the lowest growth of the review period and many product areas experienced sales decline. Although interest in healthy eating and healthier foods remained st...

Spices and Seasonings

This report analyzes the worldwide markets for Spices and Seasonings in Millions of Pounds. The report provides separate comprehensive analytics for the US, Canada, Japan, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East, and Latin America. Annual estimates and for...

Related articles

Quote, unquote: Scotland's plans for stand-alone food watchdog

Scotland's plan for a food standards watchdog has been broadly welcomed although there are concerns over the impact on jobs and caution of what powers the new organisation will have.

UK: Scotland to form food standards body

The Scottish government is to create a food standards watchdog for the country.

UK: R&R Ice Cream recalls Tesco Chokablok lines

R&R Ice Cream is voluntarily recalling its Chokablok ice cream multi-packs from customers who purchased the product in Tesco and One Stop stores in the UK.

Welcome to the home of food information, insight & intelligence

Not a member? Join here

Decrease font sizeDecrease font sizeDecrease font size Increase font sizeIncrease font sizeIncrease font size Comment on this article Email this to a friend Print this page