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Canada: Trade Implications of Proposed Consumer Products Safety Act
02 Sep 2008 09:52 AM

Excerpt from North American Free Trade & Investment Report by Cliff Sosnow and Elysia Van Zeyl (Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP)

The federal government recently introduced new legislation that, when passed, will dramatically increase the obligations of Canadian companies and impose particularly onerous requirements on companies that import consumer products from foreign suppliers. This legislation, referred to as the Consumer Products Safety Act, follows several recent high-profile recalls affecting toys, food, and pharmaceuticals.

Recalls Will No Longer Be Voluntary
When approved, Bill C-52 will provide the Minister of Health with extensive powers to deal with products that pose health or safety risks to consumers, including the ability to issue mandatory recalls. This new power represents a significant change from the current system whereby product recalls are entirely voluntary. The Minister will also be given the authority to ban any product that poses an “existing or potential hazard”. Moreover, the Minister will be granted the ability to disclose confidential company information in the absence of company consent where it is believed that a product poses a “serious and imminent” health risk.

New Ministerial Powers to Order Health Safety Tests
The proposed legislation empowers the Minister to order an importer or manufacturer to conduct tests on consumer products and to compile any information that the Minister considers necessary to verify compliance with the Act or regulations. The Minister may also require importers or manufacturers to provide documents that contain information on the results of such tests within the timeframe to be determined by the Minister. Failure to comply with any such order by the Minister is an offence under the Act.

These obligations could pose difficulties for importers who may not have access to thorough and accurate information from their foreign suppliers. Furthermore, considering that international suppliers may not be required to comply with equivalent standards in their home country, there is no guarantee that such information or records even exist. Thus, in the absence of full co-operation by foreign suppliers, importers may have to choose between conducting tests themselves and providing the requisite information, facing penalties, or choosing new sources of supply from cooperating foreign suppliers.

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