1999 No. 2026

FOOD

The Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999

Made

Laid before Parliament

Coming into force

The Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food being a Minister designated1 for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 19722 in relation to the common agricultural policy of the European Community, acting in exercise of the powers conferred on him by that section and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, hereby make the following Regulations:

Title, commencement, extent and interpretation1

1

These Regulations may be cited as the Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999, shall come into force on 21st July 1999 and shall extend to England and Wales.

2

In these Regulations, unless the context otherwise requires–

  • the Act” means the Food Safety Act 19903 and any expressions used both in these Regulations and in the Act have the meaning they bear in the Act;

  • “controlled entity” means any creature, product or material which is excluded from the definition of “relevant animal or animal product” in the Order solely by reason that it is neither food nor a food source; and

  • the Order” means the Food (Animals and Animal Products from Belgium) (Emergency Control) (England and Wales) Order 19994 and any expressions used both in these Regulations and in the Order have the meaning they bear in the Order.

Exemptions2

1

Regulation 3 of these Regulations shall not apply to–

a

the importation of any controlled entity if, when imported, that controlled entity is accompanied by valid certification relating to it, as specified in paragraph (3) below;

b

any subsequent activity in relation to the controlled entity, if it can be proved by the person carrying out the activity that at the time of importation it was so accompanied; or

c

the return to Belgium, under cover of an official certificate in accordance with Article 5 of the Commission Decision of any controlled entity.

2

Regulation 5 of these Regulations shall not, save for sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) of paragraph (1) thereof, apply to any imported controlled entity which is accompanied by valid certification relating to it as specified in paragraph (3) below.

3

The certification to which paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) and (2) above apply is the certification which would have applied in relation to the controlled entity by virtue of Article 2 of the Order, had the Order extended to controlled entities.

Prohibitions and offence3

1

Subject to paragraph (2) below–

a

no person shall sell any controlled entity which is not a live creature for the purpose of its being used to feed to an animal or in the manufacture of a product for such use;

b

no person shall possess, offer, expose, advertise, prepare, present, label, wrap, store or transport any such controlled entity for sale for that purpose;

c

no person shall consign, deliver or serve any such controlled entity by way of sale for that purpose;

d

no person shall derive material from any controlled entity for that purpose; and

e

no person shall import or export any controlled entity.

2

Paragraph (1) above shall not be taken to prohibit the bringing into England and Wales, from a member State, of any controlled entity in free circulation in the member State.

3

Any person who knowingly contravenes paragraph (1) above shall be guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale or imprisonment not exceeding three months.

Enforcement4

1

These Regulations shall be enforced and executed by each relevant authority, namely the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, the Secretary of State and each food authority and port health authority within its area or district, as appropriate.

2

For the purposes of the return to Belgium of any product as specified in regulation 2(1)(c) of these Regulations the competent authority for the purposes of the official certificate shall be the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, the Secretary of State, any authorised officer of a food authority or any inspector appointed by such an authority, where it is also an authority with responsibilities under section 67 of the Agriculture Act 19705.

3

An authorised officer of a relevant authority shall have the same powers of entry for the purposes of the exercise of that duty as are bestowed on an authorised officer of an enforcement authority by section 32 of the Act for purposes connected with the Act or regulations or orders under the Act and shall also have, in relation to any business producing material to feed to animals, the same power as an authorised officer of an enforcement authority has under that section in relation to a food business.

4

Each port health authority or food authority, as appropriate, shall give such assistance and information to the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food or the Secretary of State as he may request for the purpose of implementing the Commission Decision in relation to controlled entities.

Application and modification of various provisions of the Act5

1

Section 9 of the Act (inspection and seizure of suspected food) shall apply for the purposes of these Regulations, subject to the following modifications–

a

the references in subsections (1) and (2) to “food authority” shall be construed as including reference to a port health authority, the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and the Secretary of State;

b

subsections (1) and (2) shall extend to any creature, product or material which appears to an authorised officer to come within the definition of “controlled entity”;

c

subsections (3) to (9) shall apply–

i

to any creature, product or material falling within sub-paragraph (b) above as it applies to food which appears to an authorised officer to fail to comply with food safety requirements or to be likely to cause food poisoning or any disease communicable to human beings, and

ii

to any controlled entity as if it were food which failed to comply with food safety requirements,

save that each reference to human consumption shall be taken as a reference to animal consumption, that where a notice under subsection (3)(a)(i) is given in relation to a live creature, the notice is to relate to material which may come to be derived from the live creature, that subsection (6) thereof shall apply in relation to the destruction or disposal of a live creature so as to prevent any material which may come to be derived from it from being used for animal consumption and that a justice of the peace shall decline to condemn any creature, product or material falling within sub-paragraph (b) above under subsection (6) thereof if and only if it is proved to him that it does not comprise a controlled entity or is to be returned to Belgium as specified in regulation 2(1)(c) of these Regulations.

2

The following provisions of the Act shall apply, subject to paragraph (3) below, for the purposes of these Regulations and any reference in those provisions to the Act shall be construed for the purposes of these Regulations as a reference to these Regulations–

a

section 33 (obstruction etc. of officers);

b

section 35(1) (punishment of offences) in so far as it relates to offences under section 33 as applied by sub-paragraph (a) above; and

c

section 44 (protection of officers acting in good faith).

3

In section 44 of the Act the references to “food authority” shall be construed as including reference to a port health authority.

Revocation6

The Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) Regulations 19996 and the Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) (Amendment) Regulations 19997 are hereby revoked in relation to England and Wales.

Nick BrownMinister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food

(This note is not part of the Regulations)

These Regulations, which apply to England and Wales, revoke in relation to those countries, and re-enact with certain changes, the Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) Regulations 1999 (S.I.1999/1543) as amended by the Animal Feedingstuffs from Belgium (Control) (Amendment) Regulations 1999 (S.I.1999/1764) (“the revoked sets of Regulations”) both of which applied to Great Britain, and implements in England and Wales, in relation to products for animal feeding–

  • Commission Decision 1999/449/EC (“the Commission Decision”) on protective measures with regard to contamination by dioxins of certain products of animal origin intended for human or animal consumption (O.J. No. L175, 10.7.1999, p. 70) which revokes and re-enacts with changes Commission Decision 1999/363/EC (O.J. No. L141, 4.6.1999, p. 24) and Commission Decision 1999/389/EC (O.J. No. L147, 12.6.1999, p. 26) as amended, in both cases, by Commission Decision 1999/390/EC (O.J. No. L147, 12.6.1999, p. 29) and Commission Decision 1999/419/EC (O.J. No. L159, 25.6.1999, p. 60).

Like the revoked sets of Regulations, these Regulations define “controlled entity” (regulation 1), prohibit (subject to exceptions (regulation 2)) the carrying out of specified operations relating to them (regulation 3), specify the enforcement authorities (article 4) and apply with modifications provisions of the Food Safety Act 1990 (article 5).

In addition to making minor and drafting changes to the revoked sets of Regulations, the Regulations, by referring to the new Decision, made the following changes of substance–

a

the definition of “controlled entity” now reflects–

i

modifications made by the Commission Decision as regards the list of products of Belgian origin subject to the controls contained in it; in particular, compound feedingstuffs and pre-mixtures are added;

ii

the fact that, under the Commission Decision, the rearing period for continuing controls applicable to products from pigs and bovine animals is now closed at 3rd June 1999;

iii

the fact that, in relation to feed products derived from particular animal products, the controls contained in the Commission Decision no longer apply where analysis shows that the level of contamination by dioxins does not exceed the relevant maximum level for PCB set out in Annex A to that Decision;

b

there is a variation in the certification required for the importation of products from Belgium; and

c

the circumstances in which controlled feed products may be returned to Belgium now call for information in relation to the return to be exchanged between authorities by fax, and only apply where Belgian authorities are unable to certify the origin of suspect goods under the Decision.