CIAO DATE: 02/05/08
European Affairs
Volume 8, Number 1 - Spring 2007
EU Defending Food Chain Against Bio-Attack
Isabelle Bénoliel
Full Text
Since 2002, there has been strong
recognition worldwide of the existence
of a genuine terrorist threat to the global
food supply. However, this is not a new
threat. There have been a number of deliberate
attacks on food around the
world over the years.
For example, in 1984, there was an
attack on candies in Japan and another
on salad bars in Oregon in the United
States. In 2002, Chinese supplies of
breakfast food were also targeted. Since
9/11, some evidence has been discovered
in the Al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan
which indicates that they have studied
the idea of using specific agents to contaminate
food supplies.
The food chain is an easy and vulnerable
target, and a terrorist attack on
food could have devastating consequences.
One needs only to look at the
destructive impact that natural outbreaks
can have. In 1985, milk pathogens
affected around 170,000 people in the
U.S., while in 1991 clam pathogens affected
around 300,000 people in China.
A deliberate attack could very quickly,
very easily, affect an enormous amount
of people and have a huge cost for the
economy.
The European Union, like the U.S.
Government, takes this threat very seriously.
But when it comes to protection, difficulties
arise from the sheer complexity of
our food systems and the variety of ways in
which it is produced and distributed.
There are two basic pillars to our approach.
The first is prevention and preparedness,
i.e. bringing together the various
elements which can help in preventing
an outbreak or averting a crisis. This
means controlling food production and
imports, monitoring the food chain (including
distribution), and ensuring health
preparedness. The second pillar is the response
undertaken once an outbreak has
occurred. In this situation, the first point of
action is human health protection. How ever, the strategy also has to provide for
public information and actions to coordinate
responder networks and law enforcement
agencies.
Animal health is clearly an area of
high potential vulnerability, as deliberate
attempts can be made to introduce diseases
into animal populations. The malicious
introduction of a virus or contaminant
in an animal could spark an
international crisis by creating a major
animal disease epidemic and/or a food safety
problem. In such a scenario, the
same defense mechanisms apply to a deliberate
introduction of disease as to a
conventional (i.e. accidental or natural)
one. These mechanisms are early detection,
the use of traceability systems,
rapid control-and-eradication measures,
contingency plans and overall coordination.
A comprehensive and effective general
safety system is an essential precursor
to preparing for and responding to
agro-terrorist attacks.
Any deliberate introduction of a disease
would throw up complex risks and
challenges. For example, a virus or an
agent could be introduced in a number
of locations, amplifying the impact. The
challenge, therefore, is to prevent such a
deliberate introduction and, if it occurs,
to take swift and effective action to minimize
the impact.
The European Commission and
member states already have extensive experience
in dealing with animal disease
crises. There has been BSE or “mad cow
disease,” foot-and-mouth disease and
avian influenza, all of which prompted
stricter controls and tighter mechanisms
for the identification of animals and
their movement.
The identification of animals is
clearly, at this stage, a very valuable tool.
In Europe, every cow, goat and sheep is
identified through an ear-tag or a microchip.
If there were to be an outbreak
—deliberate or natural—this would
prove crucial in isolating the farm and
susceptible or affected animals. It would
also help with the rapid eradication of
the disease and the halt of its spread.
Another important tool is the control
of imported animal products. A
comprehensive system to minimize the
risk of illegal imports of animal products
has already been put in place. The legislative
framework includes approval of
third-country establishments, a system
of certification for imports and mandatory
checks at border inspection posts.
Controls are also carried out by our
Food and Veterinary Office. These
measures ensure that our controls on
imports are as tough as domestic controls.
On the basis of previous outbreaks, a
large body of food safety laws was developed, which outlines the provisions in
place to protect the entire food chain.
These rules date back to 2002 and comprise
of three main elements. Firstly,
there is the general obligation for food
operators to take all necessary measures
to ensure that their products are safe for
consumption. Secondly, there are legislative
provisions for controls on food and
feed by the border authorities. Finally,
emergency measures, to be taken in case
of a food safety threat, are laid out, and a
rapid-alert system for food and feed has
been established.
An important aspect of the 2002 legislation
on general food safety is the distinction
between risk assessment and
risk management. Risk assessment—scientific
and technical advice, scientific
studies, etc.—is now carried out by the
European Food Safety Authority (an
agency partly comparable to the Food
and Drug Administration in the U.S.),
which is based in Parma, Italy. It is on
the basis of this risk assessment that the
European Commission takes political responsibility
for the risk management.
This distinction has proved crucial in
ensuring that any actions taken in the
event of a crisis are scientifically based,
in addition to being politically responsible
and legitimate.
Another element which is very important
for both the food industry and
consumers is traceability. It is obligatory
for producers to withdraw unsafe food
from the market and to provide accurate
information to consumers. In order for
them to be able to do this, there are provisions
to ensure that the origin of farm
animals, feed, ingredients and all food
sources are known. Producers must be
able to identify where and from whom
they have received food or raw materials,
as well as to whom they will sell or provide
the product. This requirement relies
on the “one step back, one step forward”
approach. The same requirements apply
to imports. Through this mechanism full
traceability for every single animal food
product on the market is ensured. As for
fruit and vegetables, the traceability
mechanism is established through labeling
of the country of origin and producer.
Usually these products are packaged
on the site of production and they
remain packed until their final distribution
to consumers. It is therefore quite
easy to trace back the origin of fruits and
vegetables.
The situation is more difficult for
goods which are sold in bulk - for example,
cereals or sugar - because they are
traced by batches and products are often
mixed. In this case, there are some weaknesses
and there might therefore be an
increased risk.
Food systems are very complex—and
so are the agents of potential harm. They
include germs, toxins, chemicals and
heavy metals that can be deliberately used
to contaminate food sources. This contamination
can be done on the farm, during
feed- and food-processing, storage
and transportation, in retail establishments
or even in restaurants during food
preparation. There are risks at every stage.
Once an outbreak or a crisis occurs,
or when an attack has taken place, what
should be done? The EU is a border-free
space of 27 countries, throughout which
materials, products, services and people can circulate freely.
It is crucial that mechanisms and
arrangements are in place in the human
health sector in case of an attack. Tracing
the source of a deliberate release of a
contaminant requires a multi-sector approach,
which combines human and environmental
epidemiological action with
information from security services on an
EU-wide scale.
In the aftermath of 2001, a health security
committee was created within
the EU, establishing a program of cooperation
and preparedness in response to
biological and chemical agent attacks.
This committee aims at improving preparedness
and response. A series of actions
have been undertaken with focused
objectives: to have a mechanism
for information exchange and coordination,
and to ensure EU-wide capability
for detection, identification and surveillance
of agents in laboratories.
Stocks of medicines are also being
created at national level, but with an exchange
of data between national health
services (abiding by EU rules and guidance)
and keeping links with third countries
and international organizations.
The EU now has up to eleven rapid alert
systems which were put in place in
order to connect national systems in several
sectors. Three of these rapid-alert
systems are of particular interest here.
The first is the rapid-alert system for
food and feed that can transmit immediate
information throughout the Union in
cases where a particular food poses a
risk to human health. Any member state
that detects a pathogen in food sends
this information to the European Commission,
which circulates it to the 27
member states. On the basis of this information,
an immediate decision to
withdraw the product can be taken and
the product can be removed from the
market wherever necessary across the
entire Union. This has proven to be a
very efficient and useful tool.
The second system is a secure 24
hour/7 day-a-week rapid alert system for
biological and chemical agent attacks
(RAS-BICHAT). Established alongside
the Health Security Committee, it ensures
that there is a permanent contact
point in the field of health within each
member-state, which can be used in the
event of a chemical attack.
The third system, and the newest
mechanism, was created upon the request
of the EU Heads of State and Government,
following the Madrid and London
bombings. It is a communication
network which connects all of the services
of the European Commission. This
mechanism is called ARGUS and it applies
to any sort of crisis, whether natural
disasters (such as pollution threats)
or terrorist attacks. In addition to linking
up the Commission’s departments,
ARGUS can connect to the relevant
services of the member states. It also is a
coordination tool which could draft and
recommend decisions to be taken by our
political authorities if necessary. That
way, in the event of a crisis, immediate action would be taken at Commission
level, political level and then at member
state level.
At international level the Global
Health Security Initiative was launched
immediately after 9/11 by the G7-Plus.
This group has continued to meet both
at ministry level and at technical level.
The Global Health Security Initiative is
focussed on concerted global action to
strengthen the public health response to
an international biological, chemical or
nuclear terrorism threat. Such an initiative
is crucial for the exchange of information
and for sharing knowledge and
experience.
The EU has a well developed body of
rules for crisis preparedness and response,
and a contingency plan of action
for both public health and business continuity.
The main differences between a
terrorist attack and an accidental event
would be the dimensions of the initial
phase and the number of primary outbreaks.
But however the crisis begins, a
sound and comprehensive food safety
system is essential in order to effectively
protect our citizens. The values and systems
that were established in order to
ensure safety throughout the whole food
chain have functioned well so far, and
continue to do so. They will be the cornerstone
of further anti-terrorism measures
that the EU intends to build.
Nevertheless, given that the Commission's
goal is to have a comprehensive approach
to biodefense, there is a need to go
further than what has already been done
or what is already planned for implementation.
A consultation of European stakeholders
will therefore be undertaken
through a Green Paper on Bio-Preparedness
and Food Defense, which should be
published in spring 2007. The aim of the
Commission Green Paper will be to stimulate
a debate and launch a process of
consultation at European level on how to
reduce biological risks and enhance preparedness.
The Commission expects that
it will receive concrete feedback and ideas
from stakeholders throughout Europe
and even worldwide.
It is also the European Commission's
aim to increase international cooperation
on biodefense. Strengthening and
increasing convergence would be the key
words in our cooperation with third
countries such as the United States—to
share views, to share ideas, to share experience
and to be as well prepared as possible on both sides of the Atlantic.