1 / 33

PHYTOSANITARY CAPACITY EVALUATION

PCE. ECF. PHYTOSANITARY CAPACITY EVALUATION AS A TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE AND IPPC IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION TOOL. PCE - AIMS. * INITIALLY DEVELOPED BY NEW ZEALAND PRIMARILY INTENDED AS A TOOL TO ASSIST COUNTRIES TO MODERNIZE THEIR PHYTOSANITARY SYSTEM * OTHER POTENTIAL USES:

Download Presentation

PHYTOSANITARY CAPACITY EVALUATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PCE ECF PHYTOSANITARY CAPACITY EVALUATION AS A TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE AND IPPC IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION TOOL

  2. PCE - AIMS • * INITIALLY DEVELOPED BY NEW ZEALAND PRIMARILY INTENDED AS A TOOL TO ASSIST COUNTRIES TO MODERNIZE THEIR PHYTOSANITARY SYSTEM • * OTHER POTENTIAL USES: • * IPPC IMPLEMENTATION TOOL • * MUTUAL RECOGNITION TOOL

  3. MODERNIZATION • DEVELOPMENT OF THE CAPACITY TO MEET THE INTERNATIONAL PHYTOSANITARY OBLIGATIONS OF A COUNTRY IN AN EFFICIENT AND SUSTAINABLE MANNER

  4. PCE RATIONALE THE CONTEMPORARY NEEDS OF A NATIONAL PHYTOSANITARY SYSTEM CAN BE ESTIMATED BY A MEASURE OF ITS CAPACITY TO MEET THE INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS OF THE COUNTRY IN AN EFFICIENT AND SUSTAINABLE MANNER THIS CAN BE MEASURED THROUGH AN INVENTORY OF THE FUNCTIONS AND RESOURCES THAT MUST BE AVAILABLE TO COMPLY WITH EACH ISPM AND WITH THE MAJOR CATEGORIES OF ACTIVITIES OF A PHYTOSANITARY SYSTEM

  5. PCE – PRESENT CATEGORIES 1. COUNTRY BACKGROUND INFORMATION 2. PHYTOSANITARY LEGISLATION 3. INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES 4. PEST DIAGNOSTIC CAPABILITIES 5. PEST RISK ANALYSIS 6. SURVEILLANCE 7. EXOTIC PEST RESPONSE 8. INSPECTION SYSTEMS 9. EXPORT CERTIFICATION

  6. SECTIONS IN EACH CATEGORY 1.NORMS OF REFERENCE 2.QUESTIONAIRE 3.SELF IMPROVEMENT 4.IDENTIFICATION OF STRENGTHS AND HIGH-PRIORITY WEAKNESSES 5.IDENTIFICATION OF REQUIRED ACTIONS

  7. PCE STRATEGY SELF DIAGNOSTIC REVERSION OF THE TRADITIONAL ROLEOF THE INTERNATIONAL CONSULTANTS (MORE FACILITATORS) VS. NATIONAL CONSULTANTS (MORE EXPERTS) INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT FAO- OFFICER SPECIALIST INTERNATIONAL CONSULTANTS NATIONAL GROUP NATIONAL EXPERTS NATIONAL TEAM REPRESENTATION OF THE NATIONAL SYSTEM

  8. CLASSIFICATION OF THE OUTCOMES OF PCE • NATURE OF THE LIMITING FACTOR • - LEGISLATION (L) • DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES AND TRAINING (P) • INFRASTRUCTURE AND EQUIPMENT (E) • B. KIND OF ASSISTANCE REQUIRED • NATIONAL COORDINATION • TECHNICAL COOPERATION • INFRASTRUCTURE AND EQUIPMENT INVESTMENTS

  9. PCE AS A TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOOL • INVOLVES THE SELF-DIAGNOSTIC OF NATIONAL WEAKNESSES AND THE IDENTIFICATION OF PRIORITIES BY A NATIONAL GROUP OF EXPERTS WITH VALIDATION A THE NATIONAL LEVEL, THEREBY PROMOTING NATIONAL AWARENESS AND CONSENSUS • REVERT THE ROLE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONSULTANT TO BE A FACILITATOR WITH EXPERTISE RATHER THAN AN EXPERT IN DIAGNOSTIC

  10. * PCE FOCUSES THE ATTENTION OF THE NATIONAL EXPERTS ON THE IMPORTANT ISSUES AND FACILITATES THE ANALYSIS * CONTRIBUTE TO MINIMIZING THE VARIATION AMONG THE JUDGMENTS OF EXPERTS FACING THE SAME SITUATION

  11. PCE CAN BE USED AS A CROSS DISCIPLINARY STRATEGIC TOOL IN RELATION WITH THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SPS/WTO

  12. REGIONAL ANALYSIS PROJECT PORTFOLIO N.A.P.-LOGICAL FRAME NATIONAL TEAM INTERDISCIPLINARY ANALISIS STRATEGIC PLAN SIMETRYS ANS ASIM. SYSTEMIC VISION FOOD SAFETY ANIMAL HEALTH PLANT PROTECTION DISCIPLINARY ANALYSIS CRONOGRAM LEGISLATION RISK ANALYSIS SURVEILLANCE CERTIFICATION INSPECTION DIAGNOSTIC INSTITUTIONAL EXOTIC PEST NATIONAL GROUP THEMATIC ANALYIS

  13. PCE AS A DIAGNOSTIC ANDIPPC IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION TOOL OUTCOMES OF THE PCE APPLICATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ( 2001-2002) IN CLOSE COOPERATION IPPC/FAO-TCP RESULTS FROM 30 COUNTRIES IN: AFRICA ASIA, SOUTH AMERICA (ANDEAN AND CARICOM REGIONS), EUROPE

  14. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  15. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  16. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  17. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  18. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  19. L = LEGAL FRAMEWORKAND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES P= DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES, AND TRAINING E= FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT

  20. MAIN LIMITING FACTORSPRIORITY ORDER 1. PROMOTE PUBLIC AND POLITICAL AWARENESS 2. REVIEW AND UPGRADE NATIONAL LEGISLATION 3. IMPROVEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS (SUSTAINABILITY) 4. DEVELOP REGULATORY FRAMEWORK 5. IMPLEMENT OPERATIONAL AND MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES 6. TRAINING AND IMPROVEMENT OF TECHNICAL SKILLS 7. IMPROVEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL/REGIONAL PARTICIPATION 8. IMPROVEMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE AND EQUIPMENT

  21. TRADITIONAL vs MODERN TECHNICAL ASSISTANCENEEDS BEFORE SPS AFTER SPS • RECOGNITION OF THE NATIONAL SYSTEM • IMPROVEMENT OF NATIONAL LEGISLATION • IMPROVEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS (SUSTAINABILITY) • IMPROVEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL/REG. PARTICIPATION • IMPROVEMENT OF TECHNICAL SKILLS • IMPROVEMENT OF INFRASTRUCTURE NO MORE WHITE ELEPHANTS?

  22. THE ROLE OF NPPO IN THE NATIONAL PHYTOSANITARY SYSTEM AND THE FACILITATION OF SAFE TRADE WTO-IPPC EDUCATION OFFICIAL SECTOR STATE GOVT. FOREIGN AFFAIRS MEF MA IMPORT VERIFICATION NPPO EXPORT CERTIFICATION PORT AUTH. CUSTOMS PHYTOSANITARY IMPROVEMENT EXPORT MARKET ACCESS PRODUCTION – COMMERCIALIZATION CHAIN IMPORTS PRODUCTION PROCESSING TRADE PRODUCERS CONSUMERS IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS PROFESSIONALS NATIONAL ECONOMIC POLICY FREE-TRADE RESEARCH PRIVATE SECTOR

  23. LEGISLATION • GENERAL OBSOLECENCE IN RELATION WITH SPS/WTO AND NRT-IPPC • COUNTRY OBLIGATIONS AND NPPO FUNCTIONS NOT ADDRESSED IN THE ACTS • LACK OF LEGAL POWERS TO SEIZE AND SEARCH • NO OBLIGATION FOR THE CUSTOMS TO REPORT WITH NPPO • LACK OF SPECIFIC MANDATE TO PERFORM PRA • FRAGMENTATION OF THE AUTHORITY (FUNCTIONS SCATTERED AMONG SEVERAL ORGANIZATIONS)

  24. LEGISLATION (Cont) • LACK OF PROVISIONS FOR AN EMERGENCY EXOTIC PEST RESPONSE FUND • LACK OF PROVISIONS FOR PARTICIPATION OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR • NO PREVISIONS FOR ACCREDITATION • OVERLAPPING OF THE NATIONAL AND SUB-NATIONAL AUTHORITIES • LACK OF SPECIFICATION ABOUT THE PROCEDURES FOR THE ADOPTION OF PHYTOSANITARY REQUIREMENTS • PENALTIES AND FEES RATHER WEEK

  25. INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES • FRAGMENTATION OF THE AUTHORITY, (BETWEEN MINISTRIES, INSIDE THE MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE, BETWEEN THE NATIONAL AND SUB-NATIONAL GOVs) • LACK OF COST RECOVERY POLICIES • SALARIES NOT ENOUGHT COMPETITIVE • NPPOs ORGANIZED by PRODUCT AND NOT by FUNCTIONS AND PROGRAMS • LACK OF REGULAR TRAINING PROGRAMS

  26. Institutional Issues (cont) • LACK OF A SPECIAL UNIT IN CHARGE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS • LACK OF TRAINED MANAGERS IN CHARGE OF NATIONAL PROGRAMS • SERVICES UNDERSTAFFED – MULTITASKING (INSPECTORS CONDUCT PRA, PERFORM PEST DIAGNOSTIC IN LABS AND DO INSPECTIONS AT THE POINTS OF ENTRY) • NO DIFFERENTIATION BETWEEN SCIENTIFIC AND MANAGEMENT STAFFING PATTERNS

  27. DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES • LACK OF DOCUMENTED PROCEDURES AND MANAGERS FOR • SURVEILLANCE • PEST LISTING • PRA • EXPORT CERTIFICATION • INSPECTION • PEST DIAGNOSTIC • EXOTIC PEST RESPONSE • PFA, PLACES AND SITES • LACK OF OPERATIONAL MANUALS • LACK OF INTERNAL AUDIT SYSTEMS • LACK OF COMPUTERIZED SYSTEMS

  28. FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT • INSPECTION FACILITIES AT POINTS OF ENTRY • LABORATORY FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT • INCINERATORS AND SCANNING EQUIPMENT • LIBRARY • CUMPUTER SYSTEMS (NET) • GLASHOUSES AND SCRENHOUSES

  29. CONCLUSIONS • PCE RESULTS SHOWS THAT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES SUFFER INTRINSIC DIFFICULTIES IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE IPPC AND ASSOCIATED STANDARDS. • THE TRADITIONAL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS ARE NOT THE MOST ADEQUATE TOOLS TO RESOLVE THOSE DIFFICULTIES

  30. ADDITIONALLY, AND DUE TO THE LACK OF SPECIFIC ISPMs UNDER IPPC (DIFFERENTIAL SITUATION WITH CODEX AND OIE), IPPC MEMBERS NEARLY ALWAYS NEED TO JUSTIFY THEIR PHYTOSANITARY MEASURES THROUGH PRA • THE COMBINED EFFECT OF THE SPECIAL DIFFICULTIES TO IMPLEMENT GENERIC ISPMs AND THE LACK OF SPECIFIC ISPMs UNDER THE IPPC SEEMS TO BE PROVOKING A “DOMINO “ EFFECT ON CERTAIN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, WITH THE FINAL RESULT BEING A REDUCTION IN THEIR ABILITY TO COMPETE GLOBALLY

  31. DOMINO EFFECT NO SURVEILLANCE NO PEST LISTING NO PEST CATEGORIZATION NO PEST RISK ANALYSIS LACK OF SCIENTIFIC JUSTIFICATION FOR PHYTOSANITARY REQUIREMENTS

  32. What next? • PCE is a useful diagnostic and strategic planning tool: • Keep PCE updated • Generalize its use to other phytosanitary TA programs beyond the TCP/FAO. • Expand its applications to food safety and animal health. • Develop new additional TA tools • Legislation guidelines • Computerized information management procedures. • Coordinate inter-agency TA programs

  33. Muchas gracias !!!

More Related