Audio By Carbonatix
The Food and Drugs Board (FDB) has granted a request from Daireson Company Limited, a fish processing company located at Tema, to process expired goldfish which was to be destroyed by the board two months ago, into fish meal.
The 2,000 cartons of imported fish were declared unwholesome when it arrived at the Tema Port and was detained by the Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS) at the Tema Container Terminal (TCT).
It was later detected that the cargo had been moved and stored at the Greenwich Cold Store also located at the Tema Fishing Harbour.
Concerned about public consumption of the unwholesome fish, the FDB stepped in and put a detention order on the cold store to ensure that the fish was not sold to the public.
The acting Deputy Chief Executive of the FDB, Mr J. Odame Darkwa, told the Daily Graphic that following an application from the fish meal company and further analysis on the expired fish, the commodity was found 'good' for fish meal.
A letter signed by Mr Odame Darkwa on behalf of the Chief Executive of the FDB acknowledging receipt of an application requesting to convert the fish into animal feed indicated that the Food and Drugs Board agreed to the request based on the condition that officials of FDB would supervise the carting of the commodity from the cold store and the conversion of the fish into the feed at the processing plant at a fee to be determined by the FDB.
As a result of the negotiation, the fish processing company, Daireson Ltd, has started the production of fish meal at their site near Tema Manhean, under close supervision of the FDB.
The Head of the Drugs Unit of the FDB, Mr Vigil Edmund Prah-Ashun, said they would supervise the milling of the expired fish.
A Director of Daireson Company, Mr Sammed Bawa, said the fish would go through steaming and drying before it is milled.
He indicated that the company had been operating for over four years and depended on waste from the Pioneer Fish Cannery and unwholesome fish from coldstores.
Mr Bawa said the company paid GH¢48,000 to CEPS for the two 40-footer container consignment of unwholesome fish and gave the assurance that he would cooperate with the FDB to ensure that the fish did not enter the market.
Source: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Honouring 51 Years of Legal Excellence: Mr. Tsatsu Tsikata, Ghana’s King of Law, and the Voice of Justice
5 minutes -
AG’s move to take over OSP cases ‘farcical’ — Edem Senanu
8 minutes -
Police declare 3 suspects wanted over robbery killing of Berekum Chelsea player
26 minutes -
GIMPA Business School elevates leadership discourse through Pre-ICW 2026 coaching seminar
29 minutes -
Slow down and allow democratic processes to work – Senanu tells AG over OSP cases takeover
34 minutes -
Stakeholders push for non-partisan MMDCE elections, other reforms to fix governance gaps
40 minutes -
Power restored as ECG completes Lashibi substation upgrade ahead of schedule
41 minutes -
TTAG to submit petition on teacher recruitment and posting
55 minutes -
UPSA Law School honours Tsatsu Tsikata
57 minutes -
Joe Mettle announces Praise Reloaded 2026 at Accra Sports Stadium
1 hour -
Fuel tanker carrying 54,000 litres crashes at Ahodwo in Kumasi
1 hour -
Bono East farmers demand urgent support over market access, farm inputs and climate challenges
1 hour -
Winneba Prison officers donate blood to Trauma Hospital to replenish blood bank
1 hour -
Women in banking sector must encouraged to occupy leadership positions – 2nd Dep. Governor of BoG
1 hour -
‘Coaching unlocks potential’ – HR consultant
1 hour