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Phytosanitary Risk Analysis – the New Zealand Experience

Phytosanitary Risk Analysis – the New Zealand Experience. Dr Mike Ormsby Senior Adviser Risk Analysis Biosecurity New Zealand October 2005. Scope of the New Zealand phytosanitary risk analysis system

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Phytosanitary Risk Analysis – the New Zealand Experience

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  1. Phytosanitary Risk Analysis –the New Zealand Experience Dr Mike Ormsby Senior Adviser Risk Analysis Biosecurity New Zealand October 2005

  2. Scope of the New Zealand phytosanitary risk analysis system The international regulatory framework in phytosanitary trade issues as it applies to New Zealand The New Zealand phytosanitary risk analysis system A risk management decision making framework, and input from risk analysis. Overview

  3. Scope of NZ Phytosanitary RAs • All pests of plants (phytosanitary) • All commodities on which pests of plants may pose a risk (e.g. plant material, animal material, inanimate objects) • Consequences for pests of plants includes impacts on all values (e.g. • Environment (urban, natural, flora, fauna, marine (amenity values)) • Health (human (societal) physical and emotional health (cultural, aesthetic conditions etc)) • Economic (primary production, environmental, direct and indirect))

  4. International regulatory framework • New Zealand is a signatory to three international agreements relevant to the management of phytosanitary-related trade issues. • The agreement of sanitary and phytosanitary measures (SPS agreement) • International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) • The Convention for Biological Diversity (CBD)

  5. SPS Agreement enables sanitary and phytosanitary measures to be taken, in the context of trade, to protect human, animal or plant life or health, provided that those measures either conform to international standards OR are scientifically justified on the basis of assessment of risks SPS Agreement

  6. International regulatory framework

  7. Outcomes • New Zealand’s phytosanitary RA framework must be: • consistent with the IPPC standards where measures are to be applied to protect plant health • meet the requirements of the SPS when developing measures to protect all other values potentially impacted by plant pests e.g. animal or human health, or the environment

  8. System Design Parameters The New Zealand risk analysis framework must meet: 1. International Requirements • combine both the OIE and IPPC frameworks • meet IPPC and SPS requirements 2. Domestic Expectations • be Effective, Efficient, Transparent, and Consistent • mitigate risks to all values.

  9. NZ phytosanitary risk analysis system

  10. NZ phytosanitary risk analysis system Project Planning • Project Plan (e.g. time lines, deliverables etc) • Communication Strategy (e.g. peer review, consultation etc) • Risk Criteria (e.g. Hazard = Potential hazard or Not a potential hazard Consequence = Negligible or Non-Negligible Likelihoods = Negligible or Non-Negligible) • Hazard Identification • Hazard Scoping (e.g. grouping like hazards)

  11. NZ phytosanitary risk analysis system Risk Analysis • Risk Assessment (Risk = Consequence x Likelihood (of each identified hazard)) • Overall Risk Estimation (for each hazard) • Assessment of Uncertainty (for assumptions and risk estimates) • Evaluation of Mitigation Options (against the acceptable level of risk) • Assessment of Residual Risk (what risk is left?) • Peer Review (by external experts)

  12. NZ phytosanitary risk analysis system Close Out • Consultation • Close out report (report on things that went wrong, and things that went right) • Records Management (ensure supporting information is maintained for future review)

  13. Risk management decision making framework

  14. Uncertainty and Residual Risk • Identifying Uncertainty • Aids in identifying weaknesses in analysis • Aids in developing research priorities in support of risk analysis • Measuring Residual Risk • Aids in monitoring effectiveness of measures (know what failure is) • Informs risk management decision maker

  15. CONCLUSION • It is possible to adapt existing risk assessment frameworks (IPPC and OIE) to address all (phytosanitary and other) biological risks from pests of plants • Project management disciplines aid significantly in delivering consistency and efficiency to the risk analysis program. • The risk analysis program can independently inform the risk management decision making process

  16. Protecting New Zealand’s natural advantage New Zealanders, our unique natural resources, our plants and animals are protected from damaging pests and diseases. Dr Mike Ormsby Biosecurity New Zealand

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