Reference source : World Trade Organization
On 13 October 2025, the Philippine Department of Agriculture (DA) notified the World Trade Orgainzation (WTO) of a comprehensive draft Department Circular that overhauls the country’s import regime for a broad range of agricultural and fishery commodities, animal feeds, meat, live animals, select laboratory biologics, fertilizers, pesticides, and other agricultural chemicals.
The proposed measure unifies permitting, border inspection, transport, storage, testing, and disposal rules under a single instrument, aligning procedures with Codex Alimentarius Commission, the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), and the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) standards. Written comments may be submitted until 12 December 2025. The regulation is expected to be adopted by December 2025 and take effect 15 days after publication.
Scope and Policy Frame
The draft Circular applies to commodities classified under HS headings 01–05, 06–15, 16, 23, 30.02/30.04 (specified laboratory samples), 31, 38 (including biopesticides), and 03 (fish and aquatic products). It explicitly includes wood packaging under the International Standards for Phytosanitary Measures (ISPM) No. 15, genetically modified (GM) plants/events where applicable, and “goods referred to DA” that are suspected of harboring regulated pests.
Its objectives include food safety, animal health, plant protection, and protection of humans from animal/plant pests and diseases.
Article Structure and Roles
The draft spans preliminary provisions to final clauses, detailing application, review, inspection at port and storage, violations, sanctions, and disposal. Issuing authorities are designated as:
Coordination with other agencies such as the National Meat Inspection Service (NMIS), Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR-CITES), and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is specified for mixed-jurisdiction goods.
Operational Mechanics
Licensing and Declarations
An SPS Import Clearance (SPSIC): Required prior to loading at origin. This sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) clearance confirms that imported goods comply with food safety, animal health, and plant protection standards. It is non-transferable and valid for one shipment per clearance. Applications are submitted electronically via the DA Trade System by registered/licensed importers. The DA targets seven working days for processing. Unacted applications are deemed approved, while incomplete filings are rejected.
For pesticides and agri-chemicals, the Certificate Authorizing Importation (CAIP) is issued by the FPA to licensed handlers with product registration, experimental-use permit (EUP), or a letter of no objection. Unused CAIPs lapse after 60 days.
Timelines & “Must-Ship-Out-By” Controls
Each SPSIC stipulates a Must-Ship-Out-By (MSOB) date, defining the shipment window from issuance:
Shipment must load on or after SPSIC issuance and on or before the MSOB date. Unused SPSICs automatically expire once the MSOB lapses.
Risk-Based Border Management
Laboratory Testing and Enforcement
Laboratory testing (for contaminants, residues, heavy metals, pathogens; consideration of pre-border verification) occurs at DA central or DA-accredited labs, at importer cost; results are recorded in the DA Trade System.
Non-compliant consignments are subject to seizure, destruction, return to origin, third-country shipment, or donation (with strict food-safety clearance). Public auction is prohibited for agri-fish commodities. Appeals may be filed to the DA Secretary within 10 days.
Digital Administration and Data Integrity
The Circular formalizes the DA Trade System as the back-office platform for SPSIC/e-RFI processing, tagging (e.g., “Used”, “Confiscated”), inter-agency validation (e.g., against BOC’s Inward Foreign Manifest), and audit trails supporting risk-based inspection and enforcement.
Alignment with International Standards
The WTO notification affirms conformance with Codex STAN 193-1995, WOAH Terrestrial/Aquatic Codes, and IPPC (e.g., ISPM 2, ISPM 15), signaling harmonization of risk analysis, certification, inspection, and treatment protocols for traded commodities.
Timeline and Outlook
If adopted as notified, importers and brokers should prepare for strict MSOB controls, mandatory e-RFI pre-arrival filings, seal-integrity requirements, and expanded risk-based inspections backed by integrated DA–BOC data checks. Pesticide handlers must ensure FPA licensing and product registration/EUP alignment. Non-compliance will more quickly trigger confiscation/return and no-auction disposition pathways.
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