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HACCP - Does Cost Outweigh Benefit ?

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By Sally Subhapholsiri
Tokyo, Japan

No, design and implementation do not come cheap;  but yes, they are worth the cost,  according to experts from the US, Japan, France and Norway who spoke during the  HACCP International Symposium for Seafood  held concurrent to the 2nd Japan International Seafood & Technology Expo 2000. Colleen Coyne-Boragine, Executive Vice-President of the American Seafood Institute (ASI), quoted a US study by Dr. Ken Gall which was conducted under the New York Sea Grant Extension Program. The results of the survey, published in May, 2000, showed that the majority of the respondents view HACCP as beneficial inspite of the high cost.

The biggest benefit for industry, according to Ms. Coyne-Boragine is that “HACCP has helped to create a level playing field “. After HACCP became mandatory in 1997, the USFDA started the first round of inspections of the 4,100 seafood processors nationwide.   A third  (1,200 establishments) were found to have acceptable HACCP plans while 4% were judged to have significant deficiencies and were closed. The industry has,  since then, put in  time, effort and money, on an equal basis, to comply with the law,  she said. 

Randy Rice, Seafood Technical Program Director of the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute (ASMI) echoed the gains to industry but added that regulators also benefit from the standardization HACCP brings. Mr. Rice emphasized the value of ongoing training and education. Currently, producers pay the bulk of HACCP costs but have yet to “balance the cost of incremental hazard reduction against risk”, he said. Mr. Rice added that 70% of rejections worldwide are for non-safety reasons and training could help reduce that level. By the same token,  “education increases the ability of the consumer to recognize safe seafood and may influence him to bear part of the cost,” he said.

Juiichi Fujita from the Japanese Fisheries Ministry called seafood “Japan’s treasure” and HACCP a “guarantee system” for its safety and quality. Naoki Takatori from the Japan Fisheries Association (JFA) confirmed, in a separate interview,  efforts within the seafood industry to comply with HACCP.  However, due to insufficienct resources, JFA has so far assessed only 100 companies out of 15,000, he said.  Henry L’Oreal from IFREMER , spoke of government assistance for SMEs in France. IFREMER is a technical organization created to advise the French government and industry. Dr. Sverre Ola Roald, Norway’s Regional Director for Fisheries and Aquaculture, presented the structure of the Norwegian  “own checks” system. Althrough the papers from France and Norway did not come up with statistics on cost or responses from processors  like in the US study, both spoke of benefits for the industry in terms of harmonization within the EU regulatory bodies as well as improvement of practices and controls for industry.  

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