Core Viewpoint - The National Market Supervision Administration (NMSA) has conducted a comprehensive food safety inspection, revealing a stable overall food safety situation in China, with specific focus on meat products and edible oils, and has implemented new regulations to enhance food safety in various sectors, including e-commerce and school cafeterias [1][4][11]. Group 1: Food Safety Inspection Results - As of November this year, the NMSA completed 6.1769 million batches of food safety inspections, detecting 172,300 non-compliant batches, resulting in a non-compliance rate of 2.79% [1] - Among 39 categories of inspected foods, 24 categories had a non-compliance rate of less than 1%, with staple foods like rice, flour, oil, meat, and milk showing low non-compliance rates of 0.17%, 0.01%, 0.66%, 0.52%, and 0.08% respectively [1][3]. Group 2: Special Rectification of Meat Products and Edible Oils - The NMSA has focused on rectifying issues related to adulteration in meat products and edible oils, inspecting 2.45 million meat production and operation entities, leading to 35,529 cases filed and 1,511 cases referred for criminal investigation [4] - For edible oils, 1.892 million entities were inspected, resulting in 2,581 cases being filed, indicating significant progress in addressing these issues [4]. Group 3: Improvement in Infant Formula Safety - The compliance rate for domestic infant formula has remained above 99.95% for four consecutive years, with inspections covering all registered production and sales enterprises [3]. Group 4: Issues with Food Additives and Counterfeit Products - The NMSA has intensified efforts against counterfeit and substandard food products, filing 129,600 cases and seizing 2,071 tons of counterfeit food, while also addressing the misuse of food additives with 13,180 cases investigated and fines totaling 90.38 million yuan [7]. Group 5: Enhancements in Campus Food Safety - New measures have been implemented to strengthen food safety in schools, including the establishment of a dual food safety supervisor system for contracted school cafeterias to prevent management responsibility from being shifted [10][11]. Group 6: New Regulations for E-commerce and Chain Stores - The NMSA is set to release new regulations for live-streaming e-commerce, clarifying the food safety responsibilities of platforms and streamers, and enhancing consumer protection against substandard products [11][17] - Regulations for chain stores require headquarters to manage food safety across all branches, ensuring accountability and compliance with safety standards [19][21].
一问到底丨如何守护舌尖上的安全?聚焦食品添加剂、校园餐、直播售卖等
Yang Shi Wang·2025-12-23 15:48