The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), in partnership with Cocoa Processors Association of Nigeria (COPAN) and other stakeholders in food export trade have agreed to collaborate to ensure that rejection of processed and semi-processed cocoa products and other food exports become a thing of the past.
This was disclosed at the NAFDAC Export Stakeholders Interactive Session with Cocoa Processors Association of Nigeria (COPAN), Network of Practicing Non-oil Exporters of Nigeria (NPNEN), Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), and Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines, and Agriculture (NACCIMA) on the draft NAFDAC export regulations 2024 held in Lagos.
The Director General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye allayed the fear initially expressed by the Cocoa Stakeholders in the draft Cocoa regulations that the agency posted on its website for comments.
The consultative gathering described as an unusual meeting by the DG, was aimed at creating a platform to discuss critical issues of trade facilitation and how both the agency and stakeholders in the export value chain can forge a common front, speak with one voice for the mutual good of the country.
She noted that regulations are legal instruments for control and elucidation of standards for the compliance of all stakeholders in the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale and use of regulated products, adding that regulations derive from the enabling enactments and stipulate red lines and penalties against infringement.
Prof. Adeyeye explained that NAFDAC, which is now a WHO ML3 Regulatory Agency has, under her leadership, updated and gazetted 21 new regulations covering many areas of the agency’s regulatory activities, stressing that export regulations is just one of the several regulations that are in the process of being gazetted into law.
She said, “As you are all aware, often, our regulated products which are packaged, and for most of the time, exported without NAFDAC certification failed at the entry borders and reports have accumulated to put Nigeria at a disadvantage in international commerce.”
She lamented that a few stakeholders products are already on the red list of some importing nations.
Prof Adeyeye pointed out that this has been the outcome of years of poor oversight and lack of regulatory supervision of the quality and safety components of regulated products produced, packaged and presented for export, adding that these enabling laws have placed the responsibility of regulation and control of the quality and safety of these products on NAFDAC.
She added that NAFDAC has continued to pursue regulatory interventions at both local and international levels to ensure that the nation is not totally and completely banned from exporting any kind of food product in international commerce.
The DG, however, emphasized that these regulatory interventions are critical for the survival of Nigeria’s trade across international borders where trade laws and compliance are viewed with serious evaluation.
Also speaking the Director General of NACCIMA, Dr Olusola Obajimu expressed joy that the proposed regulation is not necessarily a revenue generation drive, but achieving global standard to ensure that Nigeria realizes its export potential.
He pledged the support of the stakeholders to ensure that the nation improves it foreign exchange revenue drive through non-oil export trade in collaboration with NAFDAC.