ASC ramps up Chain of Custody rules

The Aquaculture Stewardship Council’s new Chain of Custody (CoC) Module becomes effective and mandatory as from 30 May.

The new rules, applying to all ASC-certified producers, include additional requirements to the existing Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) CoC certification.

The ASC said the changes are intended to further strengthen the value and assurance of the ASC label.

Food safety requirement extended to May 2024

Companies that are involved in processing and/or packing must be certified to a Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) recognised scheme or ISO 22000, unless the organisation is exempt based on size either by value, volume, or number of staff.

However, ASC is providing a one-year extension to the initial implementation timing (a “grace period”) for this part of the CoC Module, the food safety eligibility requirement.  This means that at the first audit after the CoC Module becomes effective (30 May 2023), it is acceptable for companies to not yet have food safety certification in place (when applicable) without resulting in suspension of their CoC certificate. Companies must meet the food safety requirement after 30 May 2024.

“ASC acknowledges the introduction of the food safety requirement may have a significant impact on companies that have not previously held food safety certification, and that obtaining such certification requires preparation, coordination with operational seasons and products, auditor availability and may require modification of existing systems or investment in new ones. The intent of the grace period is to allow companies to remain CoC certified while they work towards achieving the new food safety certification requirement of the ASC CoC Module,” Wendy Banta, ASC’s Head of Supply Chain Assurance said.

This is a one-time provision specific to the food safety requirement at the first CoC audit against the ASC CoC Module after the effective date. The remainder of the CoC Module is unaffected by this provision.  The food safety requirement grace period will be formalised via release of ASC CoC Module version 1.1 on 15 May 2023, aligned with the release of MSC CoC programme document updates.

The latest version of the CoC Module can be found online (CoC Module v.1.1 will be uploaded on 15 May).

Increased assurance through CoC Module

The ASC CoC Module is applicable to all ASC CoC certified companies and applicants. The new requirements are part of a suite of improvements and tools to provide greater value and a higher level of assurance to programme participants and consumers who rely on the ASC label. They address seafood fraud, food safety, legality, antibiotic detection, as well as other aspects inherent to farmed seafood production.

What’s new?

The new requirements include the need for CoC certificate holders to report specific data to ASC. Data required to be submitted may include purchase and sales volumes, species, buyers, and suppliers, and may cover consumer-facing and non-consumer facing products.

All CoC certificate holders must carry out a food fraud vulnerability assessment and intervention plan to assess and identify potential vulnerabilities affecting a food product or ingredient.

Certificate holders that buy directly from certified farms must verify CoC certification coverage is continuous from farm to first buyer and consider applicable product eligibility factors.

The module also introduces a transparent list of ineligibility criteria (including illegal or fraudulent activities) to prevent organisations from becoming or remaining certified when the specified criteria apply.

For a summary of the requirements, see the ASC website.

 

Author

Keep up with us

Fish Farmer March 2024 - cover

The March 2024 issue of Fish Farmer is out now online