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New Zealand rides the milky way

NZFSA

Wednesday 3 February 2010, 8:29AM

By NZFSA

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The New Zealand Food Safety Authority is today hosting a meeting of 60 dairy producing nations in Auckland to develop international standards to keep milk products flowing, a subject close to New Zealand’s heart as exporter of a third of the world’s dairy trade.

The meeting is the ninth session of the Codex Committee on Milk and Milk Products.

Codex is the international food standards-setting agency which develops durable and globally accepted food standards that protect consumer health and promote fair trade.

Chair of the meeting Dr Steve Hathaway, director of NZFSA’s Science group, says Codex food standards are vitally important to consumer safety and New Zealand’s economy.

“New Zealand has one of the best natural milk production systems in the world and our dairy exports represent more than a third of world trade in dairy products. We work hard to protect this position and it underpins our special interest in the Codex Committee on Milk and Milk Products.”

New Zealand will be advocating flexible, non-prescriptive international dairy standards that are founded on good science and support technological developments.

Since the committee was established in 1993, the Codex Committee on Milk and Milk Products has created or updated more than 40 international standards covering various cheeses, milk powders, creams, fermented milks, casein and other products containing dairy and non dairy ingredients.

Dr Hathaway says recent changes to the international fermented milk standard are an example of the importance of internationally-agreed standards to New Zealand.

“Using scientific data, New Zealand was instrumental in convincing the committee to expand the list of ingredients used to make fermented milk products to include dried milk powder, even though fermented milk products are traditionally made from fresh milk.

“Milk powder is one of our dairy industry’s biggest export earners and the inclusion of dried milk powder has significantly enhanced our ability to maintain market access for this product, for example, countries like Taiwan.”

Over the next three days, delegates will continue the task of developing international food trade standards for dairy products, and will also debate the need for a global standard for processed cheese.

Dr Hathaway is confident the negotiations and agreements reached at the meeting will be of significant benefit to global consumers in assuring food safety. He hopes it will also help facilitate trade for New Zealand’s dairy exporters.

Notes to editors:

The Codex Alimentarius Commission (Codex) was established in 1962 by the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations. Its primary purpose is to establish a body of international standards and related texts for use by the 183 member nations, for consumer health protection and international trade. Codex standards are recognised as international benchmarks for many developed and developing countries.

New Zealand has been a member of Codex since its inception and NZFSA has a strategy in place to guide New Zealand’s participation in Codex.

For more information about New Zealand’s involvement in Codex visit NZFSA’s website

New Zealand Codex