The CCLAC Region - Regional Coordinator Ecuador

In 1976 a Coordinating Committee for Latin America, established by the 10th Codex Alimentarius Commission in 1974, held its first meeting in Rome with eight countries from the region in attendance. At its third session a proposal was made to change the name of the committee to its current form (Coordinating Committee for Latin America and the Caribbean) as this better reflected the membership of the region. In 1984 at its 31st session, the Executive Committee, acting on behalf of the Commission, agreed to this change.

The region of Latin America and the Caribbean is an important actor in the production and trade of food at a global level. The region produces enough food to supply itself and to export, with both water and land resources to produce even more.

The region has enormous natural wealth, a flourishing agricultural industry and a family farming sector that is essential for its population. The promotion and strengthening of food safety must be continued at the level of all regions to guarantee the health of consumers and fair and equitable trade.< /p>

The coordinator, Ecuador is based in AGROCALIDAD an agency attached to the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock. They aim to create synergies between countries in the region, to provide mutual support in order to overcome regional problems and examine solutions to common challenges.

The coordinator further aims to strengthen collaboration among countries and strengthen the participation of developing countries in the Commission and its subsidiary bodies.

CCLAC Coordinator

All information on Codex is public and free.

For regional enquiries contact:

CCLAC Secretariat
Agencia de Regulación y Control Fito y
Zoosanitaria AGROCALIDAD
Avenida Eloy Alfaro y Amazonas
Quito
Email: [email protected]

Four new standards, discussions and consensus. A productive session for fruit and veg

Oct 15, 2019, 10:19 AM by System
A productive session at the Codex Committee for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables as four standards are sent for adoption to the next Codex Alimentarius Commission in July. “These hopefully soon to be adopted standards for kiwifruit, garlic, ware potatoes and yam represent a milestone in international standard setting activities", said Alfonso Guati Rojo, Chairperson of the committee. Rojo also saluted the hard work by delegates:  “Consensus is key for developing Codex standards”, he said and “in Mexico we will include this principle in our new quality infrastructure legislation". Dorian Lafond, International Standards Coordinator at USDA said: “With consensus, different countries feel part of something. It gives at the same time responsibility and ownership of the standard to the people who have developed it". <script charset="utf-8" type="text/javascript" src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"></script> “Today people are asking for good food, but even more for safe food”, said Suresh Malhotra from the Ministry of Agriculture of India. “But safe food can be ensured only if we have international standards like Codex standards that are meant to protect consumer health.” Malhotra gave the example of potatoes that are cultivated and produced in more than a hundred countries, and with the new Codex standard for ware potatoes “we will be able to address food safety issues properly while ensuring fair practices in trade", he said. Read more about the work of CCFFV