9.1 to consider the proposals
made in its Recommendation 1389 (1998);
9.2 to apply the precautionary principle systematically where
food is concerned, in order to protect public health as fully as
possible, and to request all necessary scientific advice before
passing legislation in this field;
9.3 to strengthen scientific capacities for the identification
of toxic contamination of food;
9.4 to develop or improve methods for the rapid detection
of contamination and for the establishment of its concentration;
9.5 to seek pan-European or international standardisation
for successful methods to allow their wide use;
9.6 to review and strengthen their food legislation, especially
with regard to the traceability of foodstuffs and the ingredients
used for making them, to provide for strict controls and frequent
spot checks at all stages of the food chain, as well as severe penalties
in cases of fraud (which could extend to withdrawal from the market
or loss of a trademark);
9.7 in particular, to review the systems for monitoring the
animal feed industry and the raw materials used in the manufacture
of compound feeds;
9.8 to set up national food safety agencies on the lines of
those established in some member states, with an independent status,
which would include representatives of the public authorities, scientific bodies,
the economic and professional sectors, representatives of farm organisations
and consumers’ associations, and would be responsible for food quality
and safety;
9.9 to work for the inclusion of these agencies, as well as
those responsible for the quality control of drugs, in a pan-European
structure similar to the US Food and Drug Administration;
9.10 to improve co-ordination and clarify the division of responsibilities
between the ministries and departments responsible for food questions
and, in particular, to assign control of food safety to the Ministry
of Health;
9.11 to distinguish clearly the responsibilities of the various
players, for example between those who are involved in risk analysis
and those whose task is risk management;
9.12 to set up a national early warning network, co-ordinated
at European level, enabling the other member states (and, where
appropriate, the European Commission) to be informed immediately
of any risk to food safety, however small;
9.13 to develop a new food information policy characterised
by complete openness and a sense of responsibility towards the consumer;
9.14 to choose from among existing government departments one
to be responsible for centralising national and international information
concerning food safety.