What Is a Phytosanitary Certificate — Everything African Exporters Need to Know
A missing or incorrect phytosanitary certificate stops your shipment at the border. This is the complete, practical explanation — what it is, what every field means, who issues it in your country, and what buyers must verify before accepting it.
Your container is packed. The cold store temperature is confirmed. Your buyer is waiting. Then the phytosanitary certificate arrives — and the exporter's name on it doesn't match the commercial invoice. Or the weight is wrong. Or the inspector forgot to include the required additional declaration for your EU destination.
The shipment doesn't move. The perishable produce sits. The cost accumulates.
This scenario plays out more often than it should — and in almost every case, it is entirely preventable. Phytosanitary certificate errors are not caused by bad luck. They are caused by misunderstanding what the document requires and who is responsible for each field. This article gives African exporters and their EU buyers the complete, practical explanation of phytosanitary certificates — from first principles through to the specific fields that cause the most rejections.
- A phytosanitary certificate (PC) is a mandatory government-issued document certifying that plant products are free from regulated pests — required for virtually every fresh produce export
- Only issued by the National Plant Protection Organisation (NPPO) of the exporting country — not by private companies or inspection agents
- In Kenya, the NPPO is KEPHIS (Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service)
- The certificate must be issued after physical inspection by a qualified KEPHIS inspector — not before packing or in advance of the consignment being assembled
- Standard validity: 14 days from date of issue — for sea freight, issue as close to loading day as possible
- Alterations to an issued certificate are not permitted — any error requires a new inspection and new certificate
- EU importers use TRACES; UK importers use PEACH for advance PC notification — electronic submission before arrival is required
- The most common rejection reasons: expired certificate, weight discrepancy vs packing list, missing additional declaration, wrong issuing authority name
What Is a Phytosanitary Certificate?
A phytosanitary certificate is an official document issued by a country's National Plant Protection Organisation (NPPO). It certifies three things: that the plants or plant products described in the certificate have been officially inspected, that they are free from the quarantine pests and regulated non-quarantine pests of concern to the importing country, and that they conform to the phytosanitary import requirements of the destination country.
The word "phytosanitary" is straightforward: phyto from the Greek for plant, sanitary from the Latin for health. It means plant health. The certificate is, in essence, a plant health passport for your consignment.
The international framework governing phytosanitary certificates is the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC), a multilateral treaty that sets the global standards all national plant health authorities work within. Over 180 countries are contracting parties to the IPPC — meaning a Kenyan phytosanitary certificate is legally recognised at ports of entry across the world.
A phytosanitary certificate is not a quality certificate, a food safety certificate, or a customs document. It exists solely for plant health purposes. It should not contain references to pesticide residue compliance, food safety standards, letters of credit, or commercial terms — those belong on other documents.
What a Phytosanitary Certificate Must Contain
The IPPC specifies a model phytosanitary certificate that all member countries follow. Every field has a specific purpose. Understanding each field prevents the errors that cause certificate rejection.
Who Issues Phytosanitary Certificates in Africa
Phytosanitary certificates can only be issued by the National Plant Protection Organisation of the exporting country. Private companies, freight forwarders, inspection agents, and laboratories cannot issue phytosanitary certificates — regardless of their accreditation for other purposes. Any certificate not issued by the official government NPPO is not a valid phytosanitary certificate.
| Country | NPPO Name | Website | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇰🇪 Kenya | KEPHIS — Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service | kephis.org | Inspect at packhouse or airport; 48hr notice required; must be registered exporter |
| 🇿🇦 South Africa | DALRRD — Dept. of Agriculture, Land Reform & Rural Development | dalrrd.gov.za | PPECB coordinates phytosanitary compliance for perishable exports alongside DALRRD |
| 🇹🇿 Tanzania | TPRI — Tanzania Pesticides Research Institute / Ministry of Agriculture | tpri.or.tz | Apply minimum 48 hours before export; inspection at point of export |
| 🇺🇬 Uganda | MAAIF — Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries | agriculture.go.ug | Inspection at farm and packhouse; registration required |
| 🇪🇹 Ethiopia | PHRD — Plant Health Regulatory Directorate (Ministry of Agriculture) | moa.gov.et | Separate streams for coffee and horticulture exports |
| 🇬🇭 Ghana | PPRSD — Plant Protection and Regulatory Services Directorate | mofa.gov.gh | Minimum 24-hour notice for inspection at export point |
| 🇳🇬 Nigeria | NAQS — Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service | naqs.gov.ng | Mandatory inspection for all plant product exports; inspection fee applies |
| 🇲🇦 Morocco | ONSSA — Office National de Sécurité Sanitaire des produits Alimentaires | onssa.gov.ma | French-language certification; EU import requirements well-established |
How to Apply for a Phytosanitary Certificate in Kenya
The KEPHIS phytosanitary certification process follows a clear sequence. Understanding it prevents the most common timing errors that cause certificates to be issued too early or with incorrect information.
Register as an exporter with KEPHIS
First-time exporters must register with KEPHIS before applying for any phytosanitary certificate. Registration requires: business registration certificate, export licence from AFA/HCD (for horticultural produce), packhouse registration, and farm registration. Registration is a one-time process with annual renewal of the export licence.
Prepare your export documentation package
At least 48 hours before the planned inspection, compile: commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin application, phytosanitary certificate application form, bill of lading or airway bill (if available), and any treatment records if fumigation or cold treatment will be applied to the consignment.
Notify KEPHIS and schedule inspection
Submit the phytosanitary certificate application to KEPHIS with the required notice period (minimum 48 hours). KEPHIS will confirm the inspection date, time, and location — typically the packhouse, cold store, or airport cargo terminal. The consignment must be assembled and ready for inspection on the confirmed date.
KEPHIS inspector conducts physical inspection
A KEPHIS inspector visits the consignment. They physically inspect the produce for pest and disease presence, verify that packaging and labelling comply with export standards, cross-reference the consignment against the documentation, and may take samples for laboratory analysis if pest presence is suspected. You cannot obtain a phytosanitary certificate without this physical inspection — there are no remote or paper-only certifications.
Certificate issued and signed
If the consignment passes inspection, the KEPHIS inspector issues the phytosanitary certificate. The inspector signs the original with wet ink and applies the official KEPHIS stamp. The original certificate must accompany the consignment to the destination. Keep copies for your export records. The certificate is valid for 14 days from the date of issue.
Validity Periods and the Sea Freight Timing Problem
The 14-day validity period creates a practical challenge for sea freight consignments. Transit from Mombasa to Rotterdam takes 20 to 25 days — exceeding the certificate validity. How is this managed?
The answer is in how the validity period is interpreted. The phytosanitary certificate must be valid at the time the consignment departs the exporting country. It does not need to remain valid throughout the sea voyage. What matters is that the inspection was conducted within the validity period before the vessel departed.
In practice: the KEPHIS inspection and certificate issuance should happen as close to the vessel loading date as possible — ideally the same day or one day before container sealing at Mombasa. A certificate issued ten days before the vessel sails is technically within the 14-day window, but the additional ten days of transit risk — during which the certificate has already aged — is unnecessary.
For UK importers: the UK's PEACH (Plant Health Entry Clearance) system requires the phytosanitary certificate to be submitted digitally before the consignment arrives. UK guidance states that certification should be done no more than 14 days before dispatch. Dispatching and certifying on the same day satisfies this requirement cleanly.
What EU and UK Importers Must Check When Receiving a Phytosanitary Certificate
| Check Point | What to Look For | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Issuing authority | Official NPPO name — KEPHIS for Kenya, DALRRD for South Africa | Any private company name as issuer |
| Exporter name | Exact legal name matching the commercial invoice | Abbreviated or different name |
| Certificate date | Issued after the consignment was packed — not weeks before | Date predating the packing list |
| Weight and quantity | Must match the packing list exactly — same net weight, same carton count | Any discrepancy vs packing list |
| Additional declaration | Country-specific wording required by the importing country must be present | Missing or incomplete declaration section |
| Inspector signature | Original wet ink on the original certificate — not a photocopy | Photocopied signature or no stamp |
| Alterations or corrections | No crossings-out, white-out, or handwritten corrections on the issued certificate | Any visible alteration — the certificate is invalid |
| Container/vessel reference | Container number or vessel name should match the bill of lading | Generic or missing transport reference |
Common Reasons for Rejection at EU and UK Borders
| Rejection Reason | How to Prevent It | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Missing additional declaration | Check destination country requirements before every shipment — EU, UK, and UAE each have specific declaration requirements that must appear on the certificate | Very Common |
| Weight discrepancy vs packing list | Issue the certificate only after final weighing and packing is complete — never from an estimated weight | Very Common |
| Certificate expired before arrival | Time the inspection and issuance to the day of container loading — not the day of packhouse packing | Common |
| Exporter name mismatch | Use the exact legal company name from your certificate of incorporation — confirm it matches your commercial invoice template | Common |
| Photocopy submitted as original | The original ink-signed certificate must travel with or be presented at the destination — never send only photocopies | Common |
| Illegible inspector signature | Confirm at the time of certificate collection that the signature is clear and the stamp is legible — return to KEPHIS immediately if not | Less Common |
| Commodity description too vague | Always include the botanical name alongside the common name — 'fresh Hass avocados (Persea americana)' is better than 'avocados' | Less Common |
The IPPC ePhyto Hub enables electronic exchange of phytosanitary certificates between NPPOs. Kenya is part of this network. EU importers using TRACES and UK importers using PEACH should confirm with their KEPHIS contact whether electronic certificates are available for their specific consignment — this can simplify pre-arrival notification requirements and reduce the risk of the physical certificate being lost or delayed in transit. Ask KEPHIS specifically about ePhyto availability when scheduling your next inspection.
EU and UK Pre-Arrival Notification Requirements
Since 2021, EU importers of fresh produce from Africa must submit advance notification via the TRACES NT (Trade Control and Expert System) before consignments arrive at EU ports of entry. This pre-notification includes the phytosanitary certificate details. EU plant health inspectors at destination ports use this notification to plan border inspections and decide which consignments to inspect physically on arrival.
UK importers submit pre-arrival notifications via the PEACH system. UK guidance allows the physical phytosanitary certificate to be submitted after arrival — but within three days of the consignment reaching Great Britain. The pre-notification in PEACH must still be submitted before arrival.
In practice, EU importers typically handle the TRACES submission themselves using the certificate information provided by the African exporter. African exporters should ensure they provide the certificate number, date of issue, and issuing authority details to their EU buyer as soon as the certificate is issued — to allow timely TRACES pre-notification before the vessel departs Mombasa.
Frequently Asked Questions
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