The year marks the beginning of the 15th Five-Year Plan period and is critical for comprehensively advancing high-quality agricultural development and strengthening agricultural product quality safety. The Municipal Agricultural Product Quality Supervision Station, closely aligned with the city's agricultural and rural work priorities, has adopted a determined approach to effectively implement annual key tasks. Work in the first quarter progressed smoothly and yielded numerous highlights.
The station employed a systematic approach to coordinate annual work, developing the "2026 Agricultural Product Quality Safety Supervision Work Priorities" based on local agricultural production realities and regulatory conditions. Focusing on key areas, varieties, and processes, it precisely mapped agricultural production sites to achieve full coverage of major production bases, large-scale operators, and specialty production zones across the city. This established a comprehensive monitoring network spanning all regions and levels. Adhering to a strategy of integrating inspection with enforcement, prioritizing prevention, and using enforcement to promote prevention, the station connected the entire chain of sampling, testing, analysis, disposal, and law enforcement. This ensures early detection, warning, and handling of potential risks, setting a clear direction for the year's regulatory efforts.
To address weaknesses in grassroots testing capabilities, equipment operation skills, and technical standard proficiency, the station implemented targeted measures to enhance grassroots regulatory capacity. It dispatched four technical experts to form specialized guidance teams, providing intensive, one-on-one, hands-on assistance in counties and districts. Focusing on frequent challenges such as operating data processing software for instruments, testing techniques for livestock products, troubleshooting equipment faults, and using rapid testing devices, the teams conducted on-site training, practical drills, and Q&A sessions to bridge the last-mile gap in technical implementation. A long-term mechanism combining municipal guidance with county-level practical training was established, organizing batches of county-level technicians for shadowing and hands-on practice at municipal labs. This comprehensively improved grassroots personnel's skills across the entire workflow, from sample preparation and pre-treatment to instrument testing, data reporting, and result interpretation. Over 30 instances of technical guidance and training were conducted in the first quarter, providing solid talent support for area-wide supervision.
The station carried out first-quarter agricultural product quality inspection with the most rigorous standards, strictest oversight, and toughest measures. Concentrating on high-risk items like strawberries and eggs, and key targets such as production bases and large-scale farmers, it implemented scientific sampling points, standardized sampling procedures, and strict testing protocols to firmly safeguard quality safety boundaries. The city conducted quantitative testing on 402 samples and qualitative testing on 7,571 samples during the quarter, effectively identifying and mitigating potential risks. Concurrently, it advanced quality sampling for winter and spring crop seeds, testing of commissioned samples, and risk screening for aquatic products, ensuring coordinated efforts in agricultural product safety and seed industry quality control. These actions provide scientific data and robust technical support for holistic quality management of agricultural products and the healthy development of the agricultural industry.
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