CoOL welcomed by NZ Pork

Local farmers and primary producers received an early Christmas present from the Government yesterday, with the passing of the Consumers’ Right to Know (Country of Origin of Food) Act.

NZ Pork chairman Eric Roy said New Zealand’s commercial pork industry, which has been inundated by a flood of imported pork, will be particularly heartened by the news as the new legislation will provide a welcome boost for local farmers by making it much easier for Kiwi consumers to choose to buy local produce.

“It’s a great pre-Christmas present for hardworking local farmers. Although Kiwis tell us they prefer to buy born and raised in New Zealand pork, bacon and ham, it is often very difficult to tell from current labelling where a product comes from,” Roy said. “Lack of information on country of origin of pork, bacon and ham has been a significant contributor, we believe, to the growth of sales of imported pork – many people are surprised to learn how much imported product is consumed in this country.”

While around 60 per cent of pork consumed in New Zealand is imported, for cured pork products like bacon and ham, the proportion of imports is up to 85 percent, with products often marketed as ‘made in New Zealand from imported and local ingredients’.

Almost all imported pork (94 percent) comes from countries whose production systems would be illegal here, yet New Zealand has no authority to require that imported pork meets the welfare standards required of our New Zealand producers.

“This legislation will help to level the playing field for local producers and give consumers a fair opportunity to choose where the food they buy for their families comes from,” says Mr Roy.

“It may also help manage some of the bio-security risks the industry has identified, associated with imported pork.”

Pork is currently imported into New Zealand from more than 25 countries around the world, including China, Poland and Estonia, as well as Denmark and Spain. Earlier in the year, NZ Pork sounded the alarm on the risks to the local industry of importing pork from these countries, all of which have reported outbreaks of the deadly African Swine Fever virus.

The new Act means the country or place of origin of selected regulated food must be disclosed by referring to where it was grown, caught, or raised, rather than simply where it was packaged or processed. Regulated foods include fresh or frozen fruit, vegetables, meat, fish and seafood products that are minimally processed. The Act also makes special provision to include cured pork.

To avoid having the legal requirements for country of origin labelling spread across several Acts, the Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs will establish the new country of origin of food regulations under the Fair-Trading Act.