Wednesday, May 30, 2012

CFIA drops fertilizer testing


The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is dropping its near-useless fertilizer sampling and testing program.
The program is voluntary and the majority of vendors and manufacturers did not participate. 
For many years, I have been the only reporter who checked the annual report which revealed that many samples flunked the CFIA standard which was based on accuracy of labels.
The products were judged on the basis of value for money so, for example, they could be woefully short of phosphorous, but if they had too much of the more valuable nitrogen or potash, they would pass muster. 
That would, of course, be no comfort to the buyer who would be getting an unbalanced fertilizer.
The CFIA says it’s going to focus on protecting health and safety and will continue to sample and test fertilizers to verify that they are “safe for humans, plants, animals and the Canadian environment."
I hope you can stifle your guffaws!
CFIA said it will also continue "to verify that products are properly labeled to avoid product misrepresentation in the marketplace and protect consumers."
It says the change "also provides industry with greater flexibility, reduced costs and less red tape."
Hardly!