When exporting pickles to Canada, the exporter must consider three main
categories of requirements: food requirements, importer requirements, and
procedure requirements.
First, the food must meet the general food safety
requirements like having been manufactured, prepared, stored, packaged, and
labelled under sanitary conditions, as per the
Safe Food for Canadians Regulations. In addition to the SFCR,
the food and drug regulations, section B.11.051 [S], specifies that pickles and relishes shall be the
product prepared from vegetables or fruits with salt and vinegar, and may
contain spices, seasonings, sugar, food color, a class II preservative, a
firming agent, polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monooleate in an amount not
exceeding 0.05%, lactic acid, vegetable oils and in the case of relish or
mustard pickles a thickening agent.
Standards of identity and grades for processed fruit or vegetable products can
be found under:
When finding an importer, the latter must have a
Safe Food for Canadians License
to be able to import your products. In order to know if and when the company
needs a license, exporters are advised to use the
licensing interactive tool. To apply for a license, the importer must sign up with
My CFIA
and create an account and a business profile.
My CFIA
will coordinate and process the administrative services that are required for
imported foods under the SFCR licensing. Also, the importers must know if their
suppliers meet the same level of safety standards as domestic suppliers in
preparing, storing, and transporting their food products.
While the SFCR does not specify how the importer can confirm the implementation
of preventative controls, some appropriate actions could include an on-site
visit to the supplier. The importer must obtain written documentation from the
supplier to prove that all control measures are well implemented, including the
name, address, contact information of the process authority that developed the
process, and a product description with technical information showing that the
processing of the product was adequate with the standards set and the preventive
controls were in place. Also, the importer should have a written statement,
signed by the process authority, attesting that the process produces a product
that meets Canadian requirements.
In addition, importers need to write a
preventive control plan
(PCP), in which they specify how they monitor and verify that the import process
is going well, how the food meets requirements for safety, grading, standards,
labelling, and net quantity, and how the procedures they have to handle
complaints and recalls. To find out when an importer needs to write a PCP, check
the
preventive control plan interactive tool.
Any food that is imported into Canada must not be
contaminated, must be edible, must not consist in whole or in part of any filthy, putrid,
disgusting, rotten, decomposed, or diseased animal or vegetable substance, and
must have been
manufactured,
prepared,
stored,
packaged
and
labelled
under
sanitary conditions.
Under
food safety standards and guidelines, you can find the requirements set by Health Canada for but not limited to:
As per the FAO, in terms of contaminants, the products shall comply with the
maximum levels of the General Standard for Contaminants and Toxins in Food and
Feed (CXS 193-1995). Also, pickles shall comply with the maximum residue limits
for pesticides established by the Codex Alimentarius Commission.
To collect specific import conditions and requirements, check the
Automated Import Reference System (AIRS).
For pickles, specifically cucumbers (HS 200110), the AIRS indicates that
importers are responsible for ensuring that the food they import for sale into
Canada complies with the requirements of all applicable Canadian legislation
including the Safe Food for Canadians Act and Regulations, and the Food and
Drugs Act and Regulations. Similarly, it states that the labeling must be in
French and English for prepackaged products sold at retail and that the United
States “Nutrition Facts information is not permitted and that label claims must
comply with the regulations”. In addition, it notes that the food must not
contain undeclared food allergen and should be free from contamination of glass
particles.
For more information on pesticides, you can check pesticide limits for each
commodity used in the process through the
query of Health Canada.