CWA 14660:2003
(Main)Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information to be recorded in captured fish distribution chains
Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information to be recorded in captured fish distribution chains
This document specifies the information to be recorded in distribution chains in order to establish the
traceability of fishery products.
It specifies how fishery products traded are to be identified and the information to be generated and held
on those products by each of the food businesses that physically trade them through the distribution
chains.
It is applicable to the distribution for human consumption of captured finfish and their products, from
fishing vessels through to retailers or caterers.
Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information to be recorded in captured fish distribution chains
General Information
Standards Content (Sample)
SLOVENSKI STANDARD
01-julij-2004
Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information to be recorded
in captured fish distribution chains
Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information to be recorded in
captured fish distribution chains
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: CWA 14660:2003
ICS:
65.150 Ribolov in ribogojstvo Fishing and fish breeding
67.120.30 Ribe in ribji proizvodi Fish and fishery products
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.
CEN
CWA 14660
WORKSHOP
February 2003
AGREEMENT
ICS 65.150; 67.120.30
English version
Traceability of fishery products - Specification on the information
to be recorded in captured fish distribution chains
This CEN Workshop Agreement has been drafted and approved by a Workshop of representatives of interested parties, the constitution of
which is indicated in the foreword of this Workshop Agreement.
The formal process followed by the Workshop in the development of this Workshop Agreement has been endorsed by the National
Members of CEN but neither the National Members of CEN nor the CEN Management Centre can be held accountable for the technical
content of this CEN Workshop Agreement or possible conflicts with standards or legislation.
This CEN Workshop Agreement can in no way be held as being an official standard developed by CEN and its Members.
This CEN Workshop Agreement is publicly available as a reference document from the CEN Members National Standard Bodies.
CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and
United Kingdom.
EUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATION
COMITÉ EUROPÉEN DE NORMALISATION
EUROPÄISCHES KOMITEE FÜR NORMUNG
Management Centre: rue de Stassart, 36 B-1050 Brussels
© 2003 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved worldwide for CEN national Members.
Ref. No. CWA 14660:2003 E
Contents Page
Foreword .3
Introduction.3
1 Scope.5
2 Normative references.6
3 Terms and definitions .6
4 Symbols and abbreviations.6
5 Requirements.7
5.1 The Identification of the units traded .7
5.2 The recording of information .7
5.3 Fishing vessels.8
5.4 Vessel landing businesses and auctionmarkets.10
5.5 Processors .13
5.6 Transporters and storers.16
5.7 Traders and wholesalers .18
5.8 Retailers and caterers.21
5.9 Bringing in fish and materials from outside of the Tracefish domain .22
Annex A (informative) The background to the development of the Tracefish scheme .24
Annex B (informative) The philosophy of the Tracefish scheme.30
Bibliography.36
Foreword
This CEN Workshop Agreement has been drafted and approved by a Workshop of representatives of
interested parties on November 8th. 2002, the constitution of which was supported by CEN following the
public call for participation made on March 8th. 2002.
A list of the individuals and organizations which supported the technical consensus represented by the
CEN Workshop Agreement is available to purchasers from the CEN Management Centre. These
organizations were drawn from the following incomplete list of economic sectors : Fish industry, Fish
farming industry, IT industry, Research institutions, NGO’s, Retailers, Regulatory authorities, EU
Commission.
The formal process followed by the Workshop in the development of the CEN Workshop Agreement has
been endorsed by the National Members of CEN. However neither the National Members of CEN nor the
CEN Management Centre can be held accountable for the technical content of the CEN Workshop
Agreement or possible conflict with standards or legislation. This CEN Workshop Agreement can in no
way be held as being an official standard developed by CEN and it’s members.
This CEN Workshop Agreement is publicly available as a reference document from the National Members
of CEN :
AENOR, AFNOR, BSI, COSMT, DIN, DS, ELOT, IBN, IPQ, IST, MSA, MSZT, NEN, NSAI, NSF,
ON, SEE, SIS, SFS, SNV, SUTN, UNI.
Comments or suggestions from the users of the CEN Workshop Agreement are welcome and should be
addressed to the CEN Management Centre.
Introduction
There are increasing demands for detailed information on the nature and origin of food products.
Traceability is becoming a legal and commercial necessity. Transmission of all the required information
physically with the products would, in many instances, be impracticable and so the use of information
technology is preferable.
The ISO definition of traceability concerns the ability to trace the history, application and location of that
which is under consideration, and for products this can include the origin of materials and parts and
processing history. Traceability includes not only the principal requirement to be able to physically trace
products through the distribution chain, from origin to destination and vice versa, but also to be able to
provide information on what they are made of and what has happened to them. These further aspects of
traceability are important in relation to food safety, quality and labelling.
The Tracefish concept is an electronic system of chain traceability. It was developed under the patronage
of the European Commission in its Concerted Action project QLK1-2000-00164.
Participation in the Tracefish scheme is voluntary but in order for it to function, there have to be agreed
protocols for the system. For this purpose, three specifications have been developed:
- an information specification for captured fish distribution chains i.e. what information should be
generated and held by the food businesses;
- a similar information specification for farmed fish distribution chains;
- and a technical specification for the electronic encoding of the data.
The information specifications are CEN Workshop Agreements and the web-based technical specification
is published on www.tracefish.org
The key to the operation of the scheme is the labelling of each unit of goods traded, whether of raw
materials or finished products, with a unique ID. This is to be done by the food business that creates each
unit. Businesses that transform units, such as processors who convert the units of raw materials received
into the products dispatched, create new units and must give them new IDs.
Each of the food businesses that create or physically trade in those units, throughout the distribution
chains from catcher or farmer through to retailer or caterer, are to generate and hold the information
necessary for traceability. The information is to be held on computer databases, keyed to the unit IDs.
The information remains in the ownership of the food business that generated it but is available when
required by law for the purposes of traceability (in the event of a food safety problem) or by commercial
agreement between businesses. The means of communicating the information is standardised so that it
can be readily accessed from business to business through the distribution chains, when required.
st
This is a development beyond the forthcoming EU legal requirement, coming into force January 1 2005,
for each food business to independently record sources of supplies and destinations of foods, but builds
on that basis.
Commercial arrangements for businesses to communicate information through the distribution chains are
to be encouraged, particularly for the information desired by the trade to be visible at the various
transaction points in the chains, but that is not the subject of this document.
The method of identifying the units of goods traded is based on the EAN.UCC system that is already in
use throughout the world. The information is keyed to unique IDs given to the individual trade units (e.g.
boxes of fish or cases of products) but the scheme also accommodates trade in logistic units made up of
numbers of trade units (e.g. pallets of boxes or cases). Businesses that create logistic units have to label
them with a logistic unit ID and also record the IDs of the component trade units.
The Tracefish scheme does not demand perfect traceability, i.e. that a particular retail product should be
traceable back to a single vessel or farm and batch of origin, or vice versa from origin to destination.
Pragmatically it is recognised that mixing of units is likely to occur at a number of stages in the distribution
chains, e.g. in grading at auction markets prior to sale and in the processing of raw materials into
products. Where such mixing occurs, the food business is transforming the trade units. The requirement
for traceability is that the business records the IDs of the received trade units that may be input to each
created trade unit, and vice versa. The particular product is then traceable back to a finite number of
vessels or farms and batches of origin, and vice versa.
The information itemised in the specifications for recording by the food businesses includes:
– the fundamental information necessary to identify and physically trace the products, that shall be
recorded;
– specific information that is required by law in relation to food safety, quality and labelling, together
with important elements of commercially desirable information related to those matters, that should be
recorded;
– and further specific and commercial information considered to be of sufficient relevance to be
included in the specifications, that may be recorded.
Given the enormous variety of fishery products and of their distribution chains that operate within and
between different countries, and varying legal requirements, the information specifications cannot itemise
all the information that may possibly be required in every situation. The specifications provide a generic
basis for traceability. Flexibility is allowed for businesses to record further information, in their own non-
standardised files, but keyed to the unit IDs.
Although virtually every distribution chain is different, they all appear to be made up of a number of
characteristic components or building blocks. The types of business identified in this document for
captured fish distribution chains are:
– fishing vessels;
– vessel landing businesses and auction markets;
– processors;
– transporters and storers;
– traders and wholesalers;
– and retailers and caterers.
Any given captured fish distribution chain may be made up of some or all of these components but not
necessarily in the sequence listed. Further types of primary production business are identified in the
farmed fish document.
The information specifications separately tabulate the information to be recorded by each of these types
of business. Some businesses may carry out the functions of more than one of the types listed, for
example distribution businesses may act as wholesalers and as transporters, in which case those
businesses must record the relevant information requirements for each of the functions carried out.
There are limitations to this approach, for example it does not fit to the specialised requirements of live
bivalve mollusc distribution chains, and so this initial information specification is limited in scope to the
distribution for human consumption of captured finfish and their products. The captured and farmed fish
information specifications are substantially the same from processing onward.
Pragmatically it is recognised that some supplies of fish products and supplies of ingredients, etc, will
come from outside of the Tracefish domain and may lack the required IDs and information records. To
accommodate this, a business that brings in fish and materials from outside of the Tracefish domain is
required to generate and hold the key information necessary for the traceability of the units brought in,
and if they are to be traded on, to label those units with the required IDs.
CEN Workshop Agreements are not tablets of stone. They can be revisited, amended and extended.
These initial specifications could be extended in the future to include further detail and the requirements
of more specialised distribution chains, including those for shellfish and for fishmeal and oil.
These specifications will provide a basis fo
...
Questions, Comments and Discussion
Ask us and Technical Secretary will try to provide an answer. You can facilitate discussion about the standard in here.