EU revises border-control checks on food imports from certain third countries
EU importers and border-control teams must apply the revised check frequencies and special conditions on the listed food imports from named third countries when the regulation takes effect
- — EU importers of the newly added or increased-frequency commodity/origin pairs (e.g. Argentina groundnuts, Burkina Faso aubergines, Egypt sugar apple, India cumin seeds, Sri Lanka yardlong beans, Syria tahini and halva) must expect higher rates of identity and physical checks at border control posts and plan for the associated delays and sampling costs from entry into force.
- — Importers of commodities where controls are eased or removed (India Capsicum aflatoxin entry deleted; India cinnamon's per-consignment certificate requirement dropped; reduced check rates for China xanthan gum and Indonesia nutmeg) should update import procedures to reflect the lighter requirements, while continuing to meet remaining conditions.
- — Border-control and import-compliance teams must apply the replaced Annexes I and II — including the India dried-spice entries now split by commodity and CN code — when classifying consignments and determining check frequencies, or apply incorrect control levels.
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