FOOD SAFETY IN UZBEKISTAN AND BEYOND: CHALLENGES, SYSTEMS, AND GLOBAL STANDARDS

Аннотация

Food safety is a critical public health and economic concern globally. In Uzbekistan, recent legislative reforms, institutional restructuring, and capacity‑building efforts aim to align with Codex Alimentarius, HACCP, ISO standards, and WTO SPS measures. This article presents (i) conceptual frameworks and risk‑based management systems, (ii) Uzbekistan’s ongoing reforms—including new food safety law, laboratory upgrades, and FAO/ITC projects—and (iii) global strategies for hazard control. Finally, recommendations are offered on enhancing collaboration between public authorities, private sector and academia to ensure safe and sustainable food supply chains.

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Rakhmankulov , A. . (2025). FOOD SAFETY IN UZBEKISTAN AND BEYOND: CHALLENGES, SYSTEMS, AND GLOBAL STANDARDS. Евразийский журнал права, финансов и прикладных наук, 5(7), 72–75. извлечено от https://www.inlibrary.uz/index.php/ejlfas/article/view/135004
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Аннотация

Food safety is a critical public health and economic concern globally. In Uzbekistan, recent legislative reforms, institutional restructuring, and capacity‑building efforts aim to align with Codex Alimentarius, HACCP, ISO standards, and WTO SPS measures. This article presents (i) conceptual frameworks and risk‑based management systems, (ii) Uzbekistan’s ongoing reforms—including new food safety law, laboratory upgrades, and FAO/ITC projects—and (iii) global strategies for hazard control. Finally, recommendations are offered on enhancing collaboration between public authorities, private sector and academia to ensure safe and sustainable food supply chains.


background image

EURASIAN JOURNAL OF LAW, FINANCE AND

APPLIED SCIENCES

Innovative Academy Research Support Center

IF = 7.984

www.in-academy.uz

Volume 5, Issue 7, July 2025 ISSN 2181-2853

Page 72

FOOD SAFETY IN UZBEKISTAN AND BEYOND:

CHALLENGES, SYSTEMS, AND GLOBAL STANDARDS

Rakhmankulov Akmal Berdikulovich

Academy of Armed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan.

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16742462


ARTICLE INFO

ABSTRACT

Received: 25

th

July 2025

Accepted: 30

th

July 2025

Online: 31

st

July 2025

Food safety is a critical public health and economic concern
globally. In Uzbekistan, recent legislative reforms, institutional
restructuring, and capacity-building efforts aim to align with
Codex Alimentarius, HACCP, ISO standards, and WTO SPS
measures. This article presents (i) conceptual frameworks and
risk-based management systems, (ii) Uzbekistan’s ongoing
reforms—including new food safety law, laboratory upgrades, and
FAO/ITC projects—and (iii) global strategies for hazard control.
Finally, recommendations are offered on enhancing collaboration
between public authorities, private sector and academia to ensure
safe and sustainable food supply chains.

KEYWORDS

Food

safety;

HACCP;

risk-analysis;

Codex

Alimentarius; WTO SPS;
ISO 22000; Uzbekistan;
laboratory accreditation;
public health; foodborne
illness

1. Introduction

Food safety refers to ensuring food is free from biological, chemical, and physical hazards

at all stages from production to consumption. Ensuring this safety is essential to human health,
economic development, and trade. Globally, the WHO estimates that some 600 million people
fall ill annually due to unsafe food, causing approximately 420,000 deaths, many among
children under five years of age.

In Uzbekistan, improvements in food safety control systems are underway. An ambitious

legislative framework is emerging, laboratories are being consolidated and upgraded to
international standards, and training programs are being deployed, all to support public health
and facilitate international trade.

2. Conceptual Frameworks: Risk Analysis, Codex, HACCP, ISO
2.1 Codex Alimentarius and WTO SPS

The Codex Alimentarius provides internationally recognized standards for food hygiene,

labeling, pesticide residues, contaminants, and analytical methods. It also recommends HACCP
implementation and traceability systems. Under the World Trade Organization’s Agreement on
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS), countries must ensure their sanitary and food
safety measures are science-based and do not create unnecessary trade barriers. Uzbekistan’s
reform of its food legislation aims to align its system with SPS rules to boost trade and consumer
protection.

2.2 Risk Analysis and HACCP

Risk analysis, as defined by Codex, comprises risk assessment, risk management, and risk

communication. HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point) offers a systematic


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EURASIAN JOURNAL OF LAW, FINANCE AND

APPLIED SCIENCES

Innovative Academy Research Support Center

IF = 7.984

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Volume 5, Issue 7, July 2025 ISSN 2181-2853

Page 73

preventive approach to identifying and controlling food safety hazards—biological, chemical,
or physical—from farm to fork. Originating from NASA food production protocols, HACCP is
now mandatory in many jurisdictions for sectors such as meat and juice, while voluntary under
ISO 22000 frameworks.

2.3 ISO 22000

ISO 22000 provides a voluntary international standard for food safety management

systems that integrate HACCP principles and risk-based preventive controls. It is increasingly
adopted by developing countries to enhance market access—Uzbek producers aiming to export
will benefit from aligning with ISO 22000 in addition to national HACCP requirements.

3. Uzbekistan’s Food Safety Reform Landscape
3.1 Legislative Update: New Food Safety Law

In March–April 2025, Uzbekistan’s parliament approved in first reading a draft Food

Safety Law (with 6 chapters and 47 articles) tailored to align with WTO SPS rules and Codex
guidelines. It defines the responsibilities of state bodies, implements risk-based systems
including HACCP, and mandates uniform hygiene and control measures across the food supply
chain.

Notably, the law calls for consumption standards to be reviewed every three years, with

oversight by the Cabinet of Ministers and the Ministry of Agriculture as lead authority.

3.2 Institutional and Laboratory Capacity Building

With support from ITC and EU WTO-accession projects, Uzbekistan is restructuring its

food safety testing network. In mid-2024 a survey identified key labs that were upgraded to
meet ISO/IEC 17025:2017 standards. In October 2024, field assessments were conducted, and
subsequently 37 technicians were trained in record-keeping, methods validation, sampling, and
analysis for microbiological, pesticide, and aflatoxin testing.

FAO-supported projects launched in April 2025 undertook assessments of Uzbekistan’s

food control system and strategic planning workshops. Outcomes include recommendations for
modernizing institutional frameworks, improving inspection protocols, and designing national
food safety strategies and action plans.

3.3 Public Health Incidents and Enforcement

In the first five months of 2025, Uzbekistan reported 14 food poisoning incidents affecting

42 individuals, including multiple cases of botulism from home-canned preserves and chemical
contamination. Inspections of catering establishments found hygiene violations in over 3 % of
inspected sites. These incidents underscore the need for stronger regulatory enforcement,
public awareness, and improved food handling practices across informal sectors.

4. Core Components of an Effective Food Safety System
4.1 Integrated Policy and Oversight Across Agencies

Strong food safety systems rely on clear legislative frameworks, enforcement protocols,

and coordination among agencies—public health, agriculture, consumer protection, and trade.
Uzbekistan’s new law unifies authority and clarifies roles, enabling a risk-based and
harmonized approach across sectors.

4.2 Capacity Building: Laboratories and Personnel

Accredited laboratories compliant with ISO/IEC 17025 and auditors trained in HACCP

protocols are critical. Uzbekistan’s investment in selecting and upgrading key labs, along with


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Volume 5, Issue 7, July 2025 ISSN 2181-2853

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specialized training of technicians, positions the country to implement science-based testing
and risk assessment systemically.

4.3 Implementation of HACCP and ISO Systems

Implementing HACCP at food processing facilities—including mapping hazard points,

establishing critical control points, and record-keeping—is a fundamental preventive tool.
Workshops organized with support from GIZ and vocational partners in Uzbekistan have
trained industry and academic personnel in HACCP principles and Preliminary Conditions
Programs.

4.4 Monitoring and Surveillance

Continuous monitoring of foodborne illness and contamination events allows regulators

to react quickly and adjust safety controls. Globally, innovative methods including
machine-learning models (like FINDER) are used to detect outbreaks in near real time. In
Uzbekistan, routine inspections of public catering and documentation of poisoning incidents
support hazard monitoring.

4.5 Risk Communication and Consumer Engagement

Education of food businesses and consumers about safe food practices—clean water,

cooking temperatures, avoidance of contaminated locally produced goods—is key. Public
advisories on home-canning safety, sanitary handling of fruit and vegetables, and water
treatment can reduce incidents of botulism or diarrhea.

5. Global Best Practices and Emerging Technologies
5.1 Tech-Enabled Inspection and Surveillance

Machine-learning applications such as FINDER use anonymized web search and mobility

data to flag potential foodborne illness hotspots, enabling targeted inspection and prevention
efforts.

5.2 Role of AI and LLMs in HACCP

Recent academic work explores how large language models could assist in designing

HACCP plans, risk assessment tools, and dynamic response protocols—particularly for
pathogens like Campylobacter—in food supply chains.

5.3 International Standards for Improved Trade Access

Aligning with ISO 22000 and HACCP simplifies market access for exporters. Many

countries now require ISO certification or equivalent risk-based controls to ensure compliance
and consumer trust.

6. Discussion and Recommendations
6.1 Strengthen Enforcement and Inspection

Increasing inspection coverage of public catering—from under 8 % toward broader

coverage—and imposing sanctions for hygiene violations can reduce risks in informal food
sectors.

6.2 Expand Lab Accreditation and Decentralization

While three main laboratories are prioritized for ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation, expanding

capacity across regions will reduce duplication and enhance coverage, especially in remote
areas, as envisioned under ongoing restructuring efforts

6.3 Promote HACCP and ISO Certification Among Producers


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IF = 7.984

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Volume 5, Issue 7, July 2025 ISSN 2181-2853

Page 75

Encouraging small and medium enterprises to adopt HACCP or ISO 22000 through public–

private partnerships, incentives, or technical support could accelerate safe production
practices and export readiness.

6.4 Leverage Data-Driven Surveillance Tools

Adoption of digital surveillance tools, complaint hotlines, or even machine-learning

analytics could enhance detection of outbreaks and support proactive interventions.

6.5 Educate Consumers and Food Handlers

Public education campaigns addressing risks of unsafe home preservation, contamination

via poor hygiene, and proper storage and cooking practices can greatly reduce incidents of
foodborne illness.

7. Conclusion

Effective food safety systems are foundational to public trust, health, and economic

development. Uzbekistan’s legislative reforms, inter-agency coordination, laboratory upgrades,
and capacity-building activities mark substantial progress toward meeting global standards.
Continued investment in surveillance, training, and engagement across the supply chain will
sustain these gains. Embracing emerging technologies and aligning with international norms
like Codex, HACCP, ISO 22000, and WTO SPS can not only protect domestic health but also boost
Uzbekistan’s competitiveness in global markets.

References:

1.

Kun.uz (25 June 2025). “Food safety concerns rise in Uzbekistan with 14 poisoning

incidents over five months”

Kun.uz

2.

FAO (8 April 2025). “Uzbekistan Launches New Project to Strengthen Food Safety”

FAOHome+1

3.

ITC/EU project announcement (28 April 2025). “Ambitious plan to restructure Uzbek

food safety for WTO”

intracen.org

4.

UzDaily.com (3 April 2025). “Uzbekistan approves food safety bill in first reading

UzDaily

5.

Kun.uz (5 Feb 2025). “Consumption standards to be reviewed on a three-year basis”

Kun.uz

6.

Wikipedia (2025-06). “Food safety-risk analysis”

Википедия

7.

Wikipedia (2025-07). “Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point”

Википедия

8.

Wikipedia (2025-05). “ISO 22000”

Википедия

9.

Wikipedia (2025-07). “Codex Alimentarius”

Википедия

10.

Shirin Fayziyeva et al. (2023). “Ensuring food safety in Uzbekistan and its forecasting

bio-

conferences.org

11.

Nizamov et al. (2023). “Priority areas of ensuring food safety in Uzbekistan”

jazindia.com

12.

Boyquzieva G. A. (2022). “Improving food safety mechanisms in Uzbekistan”

Scholar

Express

13.

Sadilek et al. (2018). “Machine-learned epidemiology: real-time detection of foodborne

illness at scale”

arxiv.org

Библиографические ссылки

Kun.uz (25 June 2025). “Food safety concerns rise in Uzbekistan with 14 poisoning incidents over five months” Kun.uz

FAO (8 April 2025). “Uzbekistan Launches New Project to Strengthen Food Safety” FAOHome+1

ITC/EU project announcement (28 April 2025). “Ambitious plan to restructure Uzbek food safety for WTO” intracen.org

UzDaily.com (3 April 2025). “Uzbekistan approves food safety bill in first reading” UzDaily

Kun.uz (5 Feb 2025). “Consumption standards to be reviewed on a three year basis” Kun.uz

Wikipedia (2025 06). “Food safety risk analysis” Википедия

Wikipedia (2025 07). “Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point” Википедия

Wikipedia (2025 05). “ISO 22000” Википедия

Wikipedia (2025 07). “Codex Alimentarius” Википедия

Shirin Fayziyeva et al. (2023). “Ensuring food safety in Uzbekistan and its forecasting” bio-conferences.org

Nizamov et al. (2023). “Priority areas of ensuring food safety in Uzbekistan” jazindia.com

Boyquzieva G. A. (2022). “Improving food safety mechanisms in Uzbekistan” Scholar Express

Sadilek et al. (2018). “Machine learned epidemiology: real time detection of foodborne illness at scale” arxiv.org