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]

Colombia joins World Food Safety Day Celebrations

Jun 2, 2020, 13:37 PM by System

Colombia joins the celebration of the World Food Safety Day through a series of webinars, where issues related to food safety and animal health in the agri-food production and supply chain will be addressed. The requirements to ensure food safety, have become the government's main demand to guarantee the health of consumers, while representing the major technical barrier in agri-food exports and imports as well.

The Covid-19 pandemic, constitutes the largest global challenge in recent history, therefore closer collaboration between health authorities, national industry, the associations and academia, will be required to tackle the new food safety challenges in the supply chain through a multidisciplinary approach to managing risks – and in this way - guarantee consumers health and fair trade. COVID-19 also should, stimulate people from all over the world to reflect and find innovative solutions to produce food and feed in a more sustainable way.

 

Webinars 3:00 - 4:00 pm. Bogotá (UTC/GMT–5). Spanish only

June 1 - Buenas prácticas agrícolas y su contribución con la calidad e Inocuidad de los Alimentos

June 2 - Panel Inocuidad: Así trabaja la industria para que los alimentos lleguen seguros a tu hogar

June 3 - Venta de animales en plazas de mercado

June 5 - La Gestión de la Inocuidad con enfoque de cadena. Estrategias articuladoras sustentables