NOAA And FDA To Combine Resources On Seafood Inspection

NOAA and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have unveiled an interagency agreement to strengthen seafood inspection and improve seafood safety and quality.

The agreement formalizes the working arrangements between NOAAs Fisheries Service Seafood Inspection Program and the FDA to reinforce each agencys efforts through cooperation and information sharing in the inspection of fish, fishery products, and establishments. Inspection agents from both agencies will work together when appropriate, and NOAA will share inspection results with FDA.

Americans are eating an average of 16 pounds of seafood a year–thats a lot of fish, said Jim Balsiger, acting NOAA assistant administrator for NOAAs Fisheries Service. This partnership will help ensure that seafood consumerswho spent nearly $70 billion on seafood last yearcontinue to get safe, healthy seafood through combining our resources with FDA.

This new agreement strengthens the two agencies partnership and satisfies a Government Accountability Office recommendation that calls for FDA to consider the results of NOAA inspections when determining the frequency of seafood inspections and the use of limited inspection resources. The agreement formally outlines the procedures for working together at both the headquarters and the field levels, and enhances the credibility of NOAA inspections.

The FDA issues regulations concerning the safety and security of the nations food supply, including seafood. The NOAA Seafood Inspection Program works with the seafood industry domestically and overseas to help it comply with FDA food regulations and meet industry specifications. More than 30 percent of seafood sold in the U.S. is inspected under NOAAs voluntary program.

NOAA seafood inspectors inspect edible products, ranging from whole fish to formulated products, as well as fish meal products used for animal foods. NOAA inspectors can be stationed on vessels and at processing plants and retail facilities.

Source: NOAA