The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has said that it will collaborate with crucial stakeholders in the nation’s ports to revamp the export trade in the non-oil sector, as well as reduce the rejection of Nigerian products.
NAFDAC noted that this will place Nigeria in a better position in the global market.
During a consultative meeting with Pre-shipment Inspection Agents, the Director General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, who was represented by Dr. Abimbola Adegboye, Director of the Port Inspection Directorate (PID), who is also the head of the Office of Trade and International Relations (OTIR), noted that the gesture is part of efforts to find long-term solutions to the problem of Nigerian non-oil exports rejected abroad.
According to a statement made available to newsmen on Sunday in Abuja by the Resident Media Consultant, NAFDAC, Sayo Akintola, it expressed the Agency’s displeasure with the alarming rate of violations.
Adeyeye pointed out that the meeting was aimed at building effective collaboration with NAFDAC to complement its robust regulatory policies geared towards understanding the NAFDAC export processes, collaboration to safeguard a unified exportation procedure and zero rejects of Nigeria export products.
She expressed dismay that a competent authority on food safety matter with all her acclaimed global accreditation in food safety testing could be totally blanked out in the listed requirements for issuance of Clean Certificate of Inspection (CCI) by the Pre-shipment Inspection Agents.
“No wonder there are high volumes of rejects from Nigeria as the NAFDAC regulated products were not tested or production processes validated for compliance before export,” she said.
Present at the meeting were the top management staff of Neroli Technologies Limited, the agent covering South-South and South-West zone; Anglia International Services Limited, the agent covering North-West and North-Central zone and Gojopal Nigeria Limited, the PIA covering North-East and South-East zone.
They all made commitments to the immediate rectification of this lapse on their website and their process and enlightening their clients to use the Nigeria Single Window for Trade portal (www.swt.gov.ng)to procure their exports certification.
NAFDAC as a Governmental Agency was established by Enabling Act Cap N1 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN) 2004, which empowers the Agency as the competent authority in Nigeria and charged with the responsibility of regulating and controlling the quality of manufactured, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale, and consumption of food, drug, chemicals, and other regulated products.
Essentially, the NAFDAC mandate is to ensure traded products are of good quality, safe and wholesome.
The Port Inspection Directorate of the Agency has met with the Chairman of Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme (CISS) and Nigeria Export Supervision Scheme NESS, Area Comptroller of Nigeria Customs Services at the Ports, advocacy visits were made to export sheds at seaports, airports, and land boarders.
Adeyeye, however, expressed her appreciation of the activities of PIAs as a main actor in the processes chain of exportation, adding that coming together of the critical stakeholders will help make the trade of non-oil sector to be better, more robust and more consultative.
‘NAFDACs door is open to enhance export and trade, we encourage and support trade of quality products’, she said, adding: “We are enjoining the PIAs to be part of the game and to make sure we collaborate effectively,” she said.
The NAFDAC boss noted that the Agency acknowledges the importance of having broader and deeper Interactions and collaborations with sister-agencies such as Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS), Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Nigeria Custom Service (NCS), among others.
Prof. Adeyeye, who emphasized the position of export as a major aspect of building every country’s economy because of its importance in international trade and economic stability, therefore, added that the reason for regulation of the sector is to ensure that products which leave a country’s shores are of good quality, safe and meet international best practices, among others.
For Nigeria, she said, trade is critical to the national economic makeup, adding that in 2021, Nigeria exported $57.7 billion of goods, making it the world’s 52nd most exporting country.
Prof. Adeyeye disclosed that cocoa beans, sesame seeds, cashew and seven other products top the list of agricultural commodities Nigeria exported within the first nine (9) months of 2022, generating N427.6 billion or $1.02billion.
The DG reiterated that huge volume of Nigeria’s exported agricultural commodities were often rejected by the European Union for not meeting required standards, adding that EU countries seized about 82% of Nigeria’s agricultural products exported illegally.
According to her, these products are non-documented items and people move them out without clearance by the relevant regulatory agency.
The NAFDAC DG listed the following as reasons for export rejects: Technical barrier issues e.g., defective packaging and inadequate labelling.
Others include non-documentation, unauthorised transition, Illegal importation, non-compliance to destination markets’ standards, the EU will reject consignments containing foods that do not comply with EU maximum residue limits (MRLs) for Vet Medicine and Pesticides, and maximum limits (MLs) for contaminants in foods.
Others are exporters’ boycott of relevant regulatory Agency for example, NAFDAC, in the process of exportation, which leads to rejection of agricultural products, is one of the ways to address export rejections.
She added that all relevant government’s agencies and associations involved in Nigerian exports should ensure agro-products exported are safe, of good quality and meet the specified international standards.
‘’When all other relevant efforts are merged, we can achieve the reduction of rejection of Nigerian export food commodities and increase foreign exchange earnings’’, Adeyeye added.