HS codes for fish and fish products


Book Description

The classification of products is a key element in international trade. The Harmonized System (HS) of the World Customs Organization (WCO) provides an internationally recognised system of product classification. It is used for many purposes, including import duties, rules of origin, freight documents and statistics. Fish is often one of the most complex commodities to classify, with several specificities. There is a multiplicity of phyla, species, and treatments, which create an intricate set of different layers covering different products and and make it especially difficult to classify fish and fish products. This publication, developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), with the active support of the World Customs Organization (WCO), builds on the Harmonized System 2017 Edition. It presents all possible classifications for fish and fish products by species with a full description of each HS code, to facilitate its use within the fisheries sector.




Unfit for Human Consumption


Book Description

Challenges official reassurances about such aspects of food safety as salmonella in chicken and eggs, listeria in soft cheeses and paté, the risk of BSE from beef, risks associated with milk from cows treated with BST, and the safety of food subjected to irradiation. Presents the theory that the root of the problem lies in intensive farming methods, compounded by contaminated feed, faulty slaughterhouse hygiene, lack of research, and problems associated with the processing of convenience foods.




USITC Publication


Book Description










U.S. Foreign Trade Statistics, Classifications and Cross-classifications


Book Description

"This publication brings together all schedules of commodity and geographic trade classifications currently being used in the compilation and publication of U.S. foreign trade statistics": Schedule A, (imports) including cross-classification to TSUSA, and ... individual Schedule A/B classification number assignments to the item descriptions shown in the selected commodity groupings and commodity tables of Report FT 990, Highlights U.S. Exports and Imports; Schedule B, (exports) classification ... use-end and SIC-based product classifications; Schedule C, ... individual country designations included in summary reports involving geographic trade areas; and TSUSA (imports).




HS Codes for fisheries and aquaculture products


Book Description

This publication, developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), with the active support of the World Customs Organization (WCO), builds on the Harmonized System: Nomenclature 2022 edition. It presents all possible classifications for fisheries and aquaculture products by species, with a full description of each HS code, to facilitate its use within the fisheries sector, including aquaculture. This publication does not modify the structure of the HS or modify species grouping, as it is an auxiliary tool to facilitate classification and enhance understanding of the HS system from the angle of fisheries and aquaculture products. This publication is divided into three sections: (1) the first section presents all species which are directly referenced in the HS, with commodity codes for all possible classifications of their products and treatments; (2) the second section lists all HS codes for fisheries and aquaculture products with an exhaustive and comprehensive description of each code; and (3) the third section is a new section of the HS Handbook, where photos of the most commercially important species are shown. Each image contains relevant information and singularities of each species – scientific name, FAO names, main characteristics, and distribution.







Regulating Food-borne Illness


Book Description

When faced with tackling food-borne illness, regulators have a number of competing goals. They must investigate in order to discover the source of the illness. Once the source is identified they must take action to prevent further cases of illness occurring. Finally, once the illness is under control, they may wish to take enforcement action against those responsible. Regulating Food-Borne Illness uses interviews and documentary analysis to examine the actions of regulators and considers how they balance these three tasks. Central to the regulators' role is the collection of information. Without information about the source, control or enforcement action cannot be taken. Investigation must therefore take place to produce the necessary information. Utilising theoretical frameworks drawn from regulation and biosecurity, Regulating Food-Borne Illness shows that control is prioritised, and that investigatory steps are chosen in order to ensure that the information necessary for control, rather than enforcement, is collected. This has the effect of reducing the possibility that enforcement action can be taken. The difficulty of evidence gathering and case-building in food-borne illness cases is exposed, and the author considers the methods aimed at reducing the difficulty of bringing successful enforcement action.




California Decisions


Book Description