Since the beginning of this year, Huai'an has continued to advance cross-department and cross-regional rectification of the agricultural materials market. As of the end of October, a total of 23 violations related to agricultural materials had been investigated and handled, with ongoing efforts to safeguard the safety of agricultural materials.
First, through "random inspections + early warnings," a "monitoring radar" for product quality has been put in place. Comprehensive law enforcement inspections and sampling tests of the autumn agricultural materials market were carried out, establishing a "risk early-warning" mechanism, dynamically adjusting the "targeting" of sampling, and intensifying the crackdown on violations such as operating pesticides without a license, producing or selling counterfeit or substandard pesticides, and other fake or inferior products. As of the end of October, the city had inspected a total of 2,086 agricultural materials business outlets, promptly handling non-compliant products and leaving "problematic agricultural materials" nowhere to hide.
Second, through "governance + guidance," a "fast track" has been laid for industrial upgrading. Focusing on key steps such as fertilizer "registration and licensing, production records, and labeling," special law enforcement inspections have been carried out for fertilizer manufacturers, while enterprises are guided to promote industrial upgrading from the supply side. Since the beginning of this year, on-site inspections and guidance have been conducted for enterprises including Changlu Fertilizer, Lvjinfeng Huanneng, and Keling Ecology, promoting upgrades across the industrial chain and providing farmers with more high-quality options.
Third, through "law enforcement + legal education," a "rule-of-law chip" has been embedded into agricultural materials operations. Multiple departments worked in close coordination, conducting legal publicity on agricultural materials while carrying out law enforcement inspections on agricultural materials operators. As of the end of October, law enforcement personnel fulfilled their responsibilities as "rule-of-law counselors," distributing more than 2,000 copies of the "Agricultural Materials Purchasing Guide" on-site and continuously improving the public's ability to identify counterfeit and substandard products.