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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Chinese firm dodged inspection of pet food, U.S. says
2007-05-03
Boy, this kind of thing just renews my confidence that terrorists have no way of sneaking things past our ports or into our food supply.

A Chinese company accused of selling contaminated wheat gluten to pet food suppliers in the United States failed to disclose to China's export authorities that it was shipping food or feed to the United States, thereby avoiding having its goods inspected, according to U.S. regulators.

Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development, one of two Chinese companies at the center of the massive pet food recall after thousands of animals were killed and sickened, had shipped more than 700 tons of wheat gluten labeled as "nonfood" products earlier this year through a third party, a Chinese textile company.

The "nonfood" designation meant the company's shipments were not subject to mandatory inspection by the Chinese government.

The details of the case, some of which were disclosed Friday in a circular released by the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, are just the latest clues that Chinese feed suppliers may have been intentionally disguising the contents of their goods.

FDA officials are now visiting China, seeking more information about how and why an industrial chemical used in plastics and as fertilizer got mixed into pet food ingredients.

The pet food recall is threatening to turn into a major trade issue because of mounting worries in the U.S. Congress about the safety of China's agricultural exports to the United States, the ability of American regulators to protect the country's food supply and the slow pace of efforts by the Chinese government to aid the investigation.

More at link.
Posted by:gorb

#9  Needless to say this stuff was not safe for food use but it sure made cheap tea the right shade.

Got that, folks?!?
Posted by: Zenster   2007-05-03 23:49  

#8  Some more success stories for the avatars of grobalization.

Greed refashioned as immutable dialectic, science, majick, idolatry.
Posted by: IT Insider   2007-05-03 23:06  

#7  Zenster is right my boss's in-laws are involved in Hong Kong textiles. They were reps for a Japanese chemical company's textile dyes. all of a sudden they got an order for 200kg of a certain brown dye. The japs flew to HK since the sales for this brown dye worldwide was only a couple of kilos a year, what new use had someone found? Turns out a firm was using it to color tea. Needless to say this stuff was not safe for food use but it sure made cheap tea the right shade.
Posted by: bruce   2007-05-03 20:52  

#6  Check the labels on your canned mushrooms, tea, dates, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, baby corn, pineapple, shelled nuts, frozen pot stickers, soy sauce, tofu, ramen, cup-o-noodles, sesame oil, curry seasoning and a host of other Chinese food exports. Recently, tea leaves were found to contain high levels of lead because the processor had used a truck to roll over and crush the leaves, exposing them to automotive exhaust. Tainted catfish and crayfish, filthy plums and dates, the list is endless.

Domestic wheat gluten — the sort used in pet food — costs all of TEN CENTS more per pound more than the tainted Chinese crap. We need to reassess just how useful it is to do business with China.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-05-03 20:20  

#5  Not my life, I stopped eating pet food.
Posted by: wxjames   2007-05-03 17:40  

#4  Boy, this kind of thing just renews my confidence that terrorists have no way of sneaking things past our ports or into our food supply.

I'd worry much more about money-grubbing Chinese communists selling us tainted and sub-par goods. Vast quantities of them are entering the United States and have a greater potential for lethal consequences.

Wal-Mart recalls lead-laced baby bibs from China
The Illinois attorney general's office identified bibs sold between June 2004 to the end of March this year in Wal-Mart stores throughout the state. Tests there on three styles of the bibs tested positive for lead, at more than 600 parts per million, the state's standard for lead in children's products, said Robyn Ziegler, spokeswoman with the attorney general's office.

"It's a PVC product," Ziegler said. "The lead in that product makes the vinyl softer."

Wal-Mart's recall comes after a lawsuit over the bibs was filed by the Center for Environmental Health, based in Oakland, California. Alexa Engelman, a researcher there, said the center became aware of the bibs in September. Engelman said a report by an independent laboratory test contracted by the center showed that the bibs contained 16 times the amount of lead allowed in paint.
[emphasis added]
In other words, to save pennies on plasticizing agents, the Chinese manufacturer knowingly substituted a verified toxin and did so for years.

China's dismal track record merits a costly and intensive inspection protocol to put them on notice that lax internal enforcement is no longer an option. Pet deaths are just the beginning for us. Please try to remember that they caught Chinese fraudsters domestically marketing counterfeit baby formula which had no nutritional content. Chinese infants died because of this. Will it take the deaths of American citizens to finally drive stronger QC/QA barriers on Chinese goods?

Remember, the absence of costly government inspections and enforcement is what allows China to spend more on its military buildup. China cuts corners in innumerably similar ways and it all adds up to an unfair competitive edge. This is corruption on a massive scale and we are the ones who end up paying for it. Quite possibly with our very lives.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-05-03 15:12  

#3  China's agricultural exports to the United States??? And you thought Mad Cow Disease was scary? OK. But just make sure it's labelled as such before it gets to the supermarket shelf. If it says "Produce of China" any consumer with any common sense at all will leave it on the shelf. Hang the executives of any company that fail to label the stuff.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2007-05-03 15:01  

#2  Que lawyers...
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2007-05-03 08:29  

#1  the latest clues that Chinese feed suppliers may have been intentionally disguising the contents of their goods.

I am shocked, shocked to find this sort of thing going on here! You mean that a Chinese supplier is substituting toxic ingredients for pure ones in order to save a paltry amount of money? This could never happen.

Target recalls made-in-China children's toys - Chinese supplier painted them with lead paint. This disaster was only stopped because the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission randomly tested it.

The Chinese will stubbornly stonewall any investigation, since they would lose face if their tactics were publically known. Don't look for any cooperation from anyone in China on this case.
Posted by: gromky   2007-05-03 07:58  

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