Scottish farmers have openly expressed their opposition to the ongoing trade talks between the European Union and Mercosur demanding guarantees on human health, animal health and food safety before any additional access for imported products from the South American block is agreed.
The National Farmers' Union (NFU) Scotland in its latest letter to the European Trade Commissioner laid out five areas for which it demands guarantees, otherwise consumer confidence in food production could be undermined, the EU animal disease status challenged and Europe’s reputation for food production and food safety damaged.
NFU Scotland Vice-President, Nigel Miller said: “The prospect of a Mercosur deal increasing the EU trade for goods and services as a consequence of a bilateral trade agreement is laudable and increasingly likely, but jeopardising the EU ability to produce food or undermining our food security by exposing us to new risks is too high a price to pay.
“Having gone to enormous lengths to enshrine stringent animal disease and food safety controls within Europe, we cannot allow produce to enter our region from countries whose own safeguards are clearly not robust. That would not only have implications for our own standards on animal health and welfare but also poses huge question marks over food safety for our consumers here in Europe.
“Europe needs to draw a number of red lines on standards that must be met or we risk allowing products to enter Europe with unacceptable levels of controls. We have clearly laid out to Trade Commissioner de Gucht five critical areas that must be addressed to the satisfaction of Europe’s farmers before any trade deal is agreed.
“Basic food control measures must be found to be satisfactory – this is an area where failures have been recorded in the past – and use of veterinary medicines, veterinary supervision and withdrawal periods must match those standards demanded of livestock producers here in Europe.
“A number of growth promoters and veterinary drugs not approved for use in Europe are also regularly used in Mercosur countries and produce from animals treated with such products should not have access to our markets. Our consumers would expect no less.
“Trade negotiators must also recognise the considerable efforts being made in Europe to tackle the microbial quality of food, to reduce food-borne illness, and work with industry and veterinarians to significantly reduce the risk of antimicrobial resistance. All that good work in reducing risks to animal and human populations would mean little, if import standards did not protect this effort”.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesScot who? What's that?
Nov 09th, 2010 - 04:09 am 0scots are fine people.
Nov 09th, 2010 - 04:22 am 0they are a nation robbed during 500 years by their english royal masters. Royalty serving people the scots are; but this must end for scotish people best interest.
scots-english partnership made sense when UK was an empire in africa, india and australia. Today, as there is no empire left, it is a defeat situation for scots. scots are the owners of the oil & farm power but scotland is the most miserable part of UK.
Folks, they in Europe are lying (same story of the farmers in Holland who enjoyed their fancy subsidy and working hard with Dutch tax money). The truth is, they just can't compete and are not willing to compete, because they know they will loose.
Nov 09th, 2010 - 05:46 am 0Anyone interested in real economics check this out. No politics, no left or right mambo jambo..just plain math.
http://csper.wordpress.com/
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