donderdag 20 juni 2013



2012 it has been introduced, is it working in 2013?

  Tell us about your experience!

CARICOM Sets Up Consumer Product Warning System


(CANA NEWS) – The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) has introduced an online consumer-protection warning system in which 13 million consumers in 14 member states can alert authorities to dangerous products on the market, except food.
Dubbed the CARICOM Rapid Exchange System for Dangerous Non-food Consumer Goods – CARREX – the system was created in response to calls by consumer groups for stronger region-wide market surveillance for unsafe consumer goods, CARICOM officials said.
CARREX operates its Consumer Product Incident Reporting System through a website – carrex.caricom.org – on which consumers in any CARICOM country can alert their national contact point about a product, which they have found to cause harm or poses a safety hazard.
On the CARREX website, consumers and consumer organisations are advised that the information they supply will be treated as confidential and used only to process their report, enforce national laws or CARICOM treaty provisions or identify areas for improving laws and regulations currently in force.
CARICOM officials said CARREX will alert on non-food consumer products, from motor vehicles and electrical items to toys and a range of others CARICOM consumers use.
The CARREX system does not cover food safety which is monitored by the Suriname-based Caribbean Agricultural Health and Food Safety Agency (CAHFSA).
National contact points have been created in all CARICOM member states except Bahamas which is not participating in the scheme.
The Bahamas, while a member of the 15-nation Caribbean Community since 1983, has never signed on as a member of the regional bloc’s customs union and is not bound by the group’s economic decisions, including the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).
The consumer protection system was a decision of CARICOM trade ministers, who met under the banner of the powerful Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED), last November.
In the lead-up to the launch, officials from the national contact points were trained on the use of a “secure system”, which allows them to transmit notifications to each other through a regional secretariat located at the CARICOM’s CSME unit, based in Bridgetown, CARICOM said.


Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten