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GSA: U.S. Food Safety Training Program for Armenian Officials

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Published March 16th, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
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Summary

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), via the Foreign Agricultural Service, is seeking proposals to design and deliver a U.S. Food Safety training program for Armenian officials. The program aims to enhance understanding of U.S. food safety regulations and standards to facilitate bilateral trade.

What changed

The Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) is soliciting proposals for a training program focused on U.S. Food Safety regulations and standards for mid- to senior-level officials from Armenia's public and private sectors. The program, expected to last 1-2 weeks, will cover topics such as U.S. regulatory entities (FDA, APHIS, EPA, FSIS), FSMA implementation, HACCP principles, and food labeling. The goal is to equip participants with knowledge to implement U.S. standards, strengthen bilateral trade, and reduce trade barriers for U.S. agricultural products.

While this is a notice of funding opportunity and not a direct regulatory mandate for U.S. entities, it signifies an initiative to promote U.S. food safety standards internationally. The FAS will select participants and the host institution will propose the location within the U.S. for the training. Interested organizations should review the full Notice of Funding Opportunity on Grants.gov for proposal submission details and deadlines.

Source document (simplified)

Coordinating Agricultural Development & Innovation (CADI) Armenia Exchanges: U.S. Food Safety Regulations and Standards Training Program

Agency: Foreign Agricultural Service

Assistance Listings: 10.960 -- Technical Agricultural Assistance

Last Updated: March 16, 2026 View version history on Grants.gov

Description

USDA/FAS is requesting the design and delivery of a training program on U.S. Food Safety regulations and standards for 9 Armenian mid- to senior-level officials from the public and private sector. Participants are expected to include: (2) association/local NGO staff, (4) government officials, (1) researcher from an agricultural university, and (2) private sector/agribusiness

company representatives. The participants will be recruited and selected by USDA/FAS, which will be completed after the close of this Notice of Funding Opportunity. The training program is envisioned as being 1-2 consecutive weeks in duration. The host institution shall propose the place(s) of performance within the United States.

The goal of the program is to provide a comprehensive understanding of U.S. food safety regulations and standards, equipping the Armenian participants with the knowledge and skills necessary to implement and comply with these regulations effectively, to strengthen bilateral trade with the United States, and reduce trade barriers for U.S. agricultural commodities and products. The program will provide the participants with an in-depth understanding of the U.S. regulatory system and internationally recognized, science-based food safety measures that facilitate international trade and benefit U.S. agricultural exports. The objective is to improve the participants’ understanding of the U.S. food safety and regulatory systems and harmonize their food safety regulatory systems with evidence-based international standards, ultimately contributing to increased exports of U.S. agricultural commodities and products. Field visits to food processing sites and laboratories are encouraged to highlight how producers learn, implement, and comply with food safety regulations. Additional meetings with U.S. producer cooperatives, associations, and companies are also encouraged to demonstrate how private sector and the government work in partnership. The program design shall include a thorough understanding of U.S. Food Safety regulations and standards, including:

  1. Understanding U.S. Food Safety Regulations

i. Standards (Codex, SPS regulations, ISO 17025)

ii. Traceability requirements, including the importance of traceability in the food supply chain and requirements for record-keeping.

iii. Risk-based assessments, risk analysis/management, including techniques for assessing and managing risks associated with food safety.

iv. U.S. regulatory entities and roles (FDA, APHIS, EPA, FSIS).

v. Interagency responses to WTO SPS and TBT notifications.

vi. Regulatory measures on biosafety/biotechnology.

vii. Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) implementation, including detailed explanation on its impact on food safety practices and regulations.

viii. Distinction between food safety and food quality (Ex: role of AMS in quality standards and grading)

ix. Regulations for food labeling, including nutritional information, allergens, and country of origin labeling.

  1. Understanding Food Safety Principles and Implementation

i. Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) principles, design and implementation Sanitation Standard Operating Procedures (SSOPs) for implementing Food Safety measures, including guidelines for maintaining sanitary conditions in food production and processing.

ii. Distribution chain, food safety during transport and storage.

iii. Qualitative and quantitative methods to assess risk.

iv. Food processing and systems.

v. Food quality and handling, including best practices for safe handling, storage, and transportation of food products.

vi. Monitoring, evaluation, and dissemination.

vii. Certification and equivalence of Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS).

viii. Good manufacturing practices, good agricultural practices & good laboratory practices, including standards for manufacturing, processing, packing, and holding food.

ix. Industry role and partnerships.

x. Inspection processes, including what inspectors look for and how inspections are conducted.

xi. Consequences of non-compliance, including recalls, fines, and other enforcement actions.

xii. Microbiological, chemical analysis and contamination hazards.

xiii. Food safety public health alerts and recalls, including steps to take in the event of a food safety crisis, including recall procedures and communication strategies

xiv. Response to foodborne illness outbreaks.

xv. Food safety audits.

xvi. Food preservation; food additive use (including food colorings).

xvii. New technologies and innovations in food safety, (e.g. blockchain for traceability, advanced testing methods, etc.).

  1. Understanding International Food Safety Standards and Trade

i. Comparison of U.S. food safety standards with international standards and the importance of harmonization.

ii. Pre-registration and post-registration.

iii. Maximum residue levels.

iv. Import/export requirements for food products.

v. Nutritional and food safety education.

  1. Real-World Examples

i. Case studies of food safety incidents and how they were managed, highlighting lessons learned and best practices.

ii. Visits to food production and processing facilities to see food safety practices and regulations in action.

iii. Importance of training employees on food safety practices and regulatory compliance.

iv. Consumer education on food safety and proper food handling practices.

Eligibility

Eligible applicants

Miscellaneous

  • Other

Additional information

State cooperative institutions or other colleges and universities in the United States, as defined at 7 U.S.C. § 3103

Grantor contact information

Description

Benjamin Kairn
International Program Specialist
202-720-0430

Email

USDA EMAIL

Benjamin.kairn@usda.gov

Documents

Download all
| File name | Description | Last updated |
| --- | --- | --- |
| CADIArmeniaExchangesFoodSafetyNOFOrevised_dates.pdf | FULL NOFO | Mar 16, 2026 11:40 AM UTC |

Link to additional information

--

Closing: May 14, 2026

Application process

This site is a work in progress. Go to www.grants.gov to apply, track application status, and subscribe to updates. View on Grants.gov

Award

$110,000

Program Funding

1

Expected awards

$--

Award Minimum

$110,000

Award Maximum

Funding opportunity number:

USDA-FAS-10960-0700-10-25-0010

Cost sharing or matching requirement:

No Funding instrument type:

Grant

Opportunity Category:

Discretionary

Opportunity Category Explanation:

-- Category of Funding Activity:

Agriculture

Category Explanation:

--

History

Version:

2

Posted date:

March 16, 2026

Archive date:

June 13, 2026

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
GSA
Published
March 16th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Manufacturers
Geographic scope
Armenia

Taxonomy

Primary area
Food Safety
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
International Trade Government Programs

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