Know Where Your Produce Comes at Foodstuffs
NEWS RELEASE
10th AUGUST 2007
Know Where Your
Produce Comes from When Shopping at Foodstuffs
Supermarkets
Foodstuffs is introducing country of origin information for all the fresh fruit, vegetables, meat and seafood sold in its PAK’nSAVE, New World, Write Price, Shoprite supermarkets and Four Square stores throughout the country.
Foodstuffs (NZ) Limited executive manager Melissa Hodd says the decision comes from the group’s wish to respond positively to increased consumer interest about the origin of food as a result of recent international food scares.
“There’s been a huge amount of public interest in this, and we’ve heard what people are saying. We want to be able to assist our customers to make better- informed decisions when they shop in our stores,” she says.
“We’re asking our suppliers to provide the country of origin information to us, and we will be working through this over the next few months.”
She says they also need to put internal systems in place to ensure the information provided to customers is robust, and anticipates the policy will be fully implemented by December.
ENDS
Foodstuffs Q&A re country of origin information 10.8.07
1. Why are you doing this?
Our customers
have been asking for it, and we pride ourselves on listening
to our customers.
2. Why haven’t you done it
before?
Legally we’re not required to do this, so we
don’t always receive this information from suppliers.
However, when we do receive it, we generally declare it in
our stores. In future, we will be asking our suppliers to
provide the information for all fresh fruit, vegetables,
meat and seafood.
3. Are you doing this in response to the
Greens’ petition?
No, we have already been providing
the information for some fruit and vegetables and we are to
extend this to all fresh fruit and vegetables as well as
fresh meat and seafood in response to public demand, not one
political party’s petition.
4. Why is it going to take
until the end of the year before it’s fully implemented
– don’t you know where your produce comes from?
Yes,
we do know where our produce comes from. But we deal with
myriad suppliers, and it is an involved process ensuring we
achieve accuracy in the information we provide our
customers.
5. Why are you restricting it to fresh
foods?
It is relatively straightforward to declare the
country of origin for one single ingredient. Processed food,
involving more than one ingredient, is much more complex and
it would difficult and expensive to produce labels for this.
For example, tinned fruit salad: it may contain NZ peaches
70% of the time, but when the supplier cannot source
sufficient NZ peaches, they are forced to import to meet
demand. That would involve changing the packaging and the
label, which is a time-consuming and extremely costly
process.
6. Is this a food safety move?
Not at all.
This is solely aimed at providing customers with more
information on the origin of the produce they buy. We
operate extremely stringent food safety standards and
already go above and beyond the current legal
requirements.
7. Why do you import produce at all?
We
want to provide our customers with both range and choice. If
we didn’t import produce, items such as bananas, mangoes,
pineapple and California oranges would be unobtainable in
our supermarkets.
8. Isn’t the NZ produce good
enough?
We always look to supply NZ produce, but there
are times when it’s simply not feasible. Customers want to
be able to buy these products year-round, and by importing
to meet the seasonal shortfall in the NZ market (for
example, oranges) means we can meet our customers’
demands.