23 Sep 2025 19:49

Russia, China intend to achieve mutual recognition of standards for meat products

MOSCOW. Sept 23 (Interfax) - Russia and China have already achieved mutual recognition of five standards for research into oilseed crops and are now working on mutually recognizing standards for meat products as well, but it is unlikely that this process will be completed this year, Director of the Gorbatov Federal Research Center for Food Systems, Oksana Kuznetsova, said at the Food Quality Food Safety international conference (FQFS 2025), according to the publication Agroexpert.

"In 2024, we managed to mutually recognize five standards for research into oilseed crops. And now, using these methods, we do not need to additionally re-check when supplying our oilseeds and oils to China using Chinese methods," Kuznetsova said. "This year we are working on recognizing the standard for meat. Everything is more complicated there, as usual with meat, and I think that this year, unfortunately, we will not succeed. Nevertheless, we have very constructive work."

Artem Daushev, an assistant to the head of the Federal Service for Veterinary and Phytosanitary Surveillance (Rosselkhoznadzor), who spoke at the conference, confirmed the service's forecast that Russia could export up to 1 million tonnes of meat this year via all permitted directions.

As reported by Rosselkhoznadzor, 87,900 tonnes of poultry meat and offal, 24,900 tonnes of pork, 21,900 tonnes of pork offal, 13,300 tonnes of beef, 3,100 tonnes of cattle offal and 596,400 tonnes of feed and feed additives had been shipped from Russia to China by the beginning of September.

In particular, according to data from China's General Administration of Customs, in January-August this year Russia became the second-largest exporter of poultry meat to China after Brazil, shipping $321.7 million worth of exports, up 17.8% compared to the figure for the same period last year ($272.98 million).

The fifth Food Quality Food Safety international conference is taking place in Moscow from September 23 to 25.