Author Topic: Chicken from China?!?!  (Read 1111 times)

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Chicken from China?!?!
« on: May 10, 2007, 08:00:14 AM »
http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2007/05/09/chicken_from_china/?page=full

Chicken from China?
Questionable farming practices fuel skepticism of US plan to import poultry

By Diedtra Henderson, Globe Staff | May 9, 2007

WASHINGTON -- In China, some farmers try to maximize the output from their small plots by flooding produce with unapproved pesticides, pumping livestock with antibiotics banned in the United States, and using human feces as fertilizer to boost soil productivity. But the questionable practices don't end there: Chicken pens are frequently suspended over ponds where seafood is raised, recycling chicken waste as a food source for seafood, according to a leading food safety expert who served as a federal adviser to the Food and Drug Administration.

China's suspect agricultural practices could soon affect American consumers. Federal authorities are working on a proposal to allow chickens raised, slaughtered, and cooked in China to be sold here, and under current regulations, store labels do not have to indicate the meat's origin.

According to the US Department of Agriculture , China's top agricultural export goal is opening the US market to its cooked chickens. Representative Rosa DeLauro , who is fighting the change, says China does not deserve entry to the coveted, closed poultry market.

Agricultural exports from China to the United States ballooned from $1 billion in 2002 to nearly $2.3 billion in 2006 , according to the US Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service . DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut and chairwoman of a US House agricultural subcommittee , said Congress should signal its willingness to restrict imports from China until it improves food safety oversight.

"There is deception. There is lax regulation, and they've got unsanitary conditions," DeLauro said. "They need to hear from us they're at risk. Congress has to look at limiting some of their agricultural imports."

The USDA, which shares food safety oversight with the FDA, says its proposal to allow the sale of Chinese chicken is in the early stages and that there will be many opportunities for the public to be heard on the matter. Under the plan, any country seeking to export meat , poultry, or egg products to the United States must earn "equivalency," with documentation that its product is as safe and wholesome as the domestic competition. USDA officials would review records, conduct on-site audits, and confirm that foreign laboratories could ensure the food's safety, said Steven Cohen , a spokesman for the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service . The agency would also inspect imported products as they enter the nation, he said.

"This is a process that has barely begun, and there is a very lengthy review," Cohen said.

According to Lucius Adkins , president of United Poultry Growers Association , the idea "should be strangled in infancy." The group represents more than 700 producers in Georgia , one of the nation's leading poultry producing states.

"You don't know what conditions existed in that plant [in China]. You didn't have a government representative there watching [poultry] being slaughtered and processed. It's going to come here packaged," Adkins said. "They're already killing our pets. Do we want to eat their food?"

The National Chicken Council , which represents companies that produce 95 percent of US-grown poultry, has not taken a position on the USDA's proposal.

Each American will eat an estimated 85 pounds of broiler chickens this year, down from 88 pounds last year -- the first per-capita decrease since 1973 . Currently, the US imports almost no poultry, except for a small amount of chicken exported by Canadian producers, said Richard Lobb, a spokesman for the trade association.

But Americans do eat food from around the world, Lobb said. "People don't have any problem with potpie from Canada. How they would feel about frozen chicken from China or specialty Chinese products that are canned or dried or something, I don't know."

In China's agricultural system, many farmers toil on 1-acre plots, while US farmers often work thousands of acres, said Michael Doyle , director of the Center for Food Safety at the University of Georgia and former chairman of the FDA's science advisory board.

In China, "there are hundreds of thousands of these little farms," Doyle said. "They have small ponds. And over the ponds -- in not all cases, but in many cases -- they'll have chicken cages. It might be like 20,000 chickens in cages. The chicken feces is what feeds the shrimp."

The USDA has found that up to 10 percent of shrimp imported from China contains salmonella, he said. Even more worrisome are shrimp imported from China that contain antibiotics that no amount of cooking can neutralize. Last month alone, the FDA rejected 51 shipments of catfish , eel , shrimp, and tilapia imported from China because of such contaminants as salmonella , veterinary drugs, and nitrofuran , a cancer-causing chemical. A long history of such test results spurred the FDA to begin working proactively with Chinese farmers on safer seafood production methods, Doyle said.

"In terms of harmful bacteria, consumers have control over that. Even in [poultry] we produce in the US, there is contamination with salmonella," Doyle said. "In terms of veterinary drugs and pesticides, well, good food handling practices won't fix that. That has to be addressed in the country of origin."

Joan Zahka , a Lexington woman, said she wouldn't buy Chinese poultry, based on what she has seen firsthand. Zahka grows her own greens and herbs, and when her children were young she ground organic baby food before it was sold in stores. She shops at Whole Foods for fresh produce and scrutinizes country of origin labels the grocery store chain voluntarily posts.

"There is no way I'm going to knowingly buy chicken from China," Zahka said. "There are all kinds of red flags for me. I've traveled through China. I know we have a much greater value on life here."

Diedtra Henderson can be reached at dhenderson@globe.com.

24KT

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2007, 12:51:55 PM »
All the more incentive to go vegetarian.  :o

This might be a good topic on the "Political Board"
w

Slin1

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2007, 01:05:20 PM »
How is any1 suppose to read all that text

Girls from China is the shizznit
Money drugs and bitches

~flower~

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2007, 01:15:26 PM »
How is any1 suppose to read all that text

Girls from China is the shizznit

  all that text?      Ask a 4th grader to read it to you.

Slin1

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #4 on: May 10, 2007, 01:28:07 PM »
  all that text?      Ask a 4th grader to read it to you.

I don't got many 4th graders in me relations you pedophile you

Care to share?
Money drugs and bitches

~flower~

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #5 on: May 10, 2007, 03:40:16 PM »
I don't got many 4th graders in me relations you pedophile you

Care to share?


      you done speak good englush

Slin1

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #6 on: May 10, 2007, 11:53:20 PM »
WTF somehow i read chicks from China  LOL  :-\

Now this thread not interesting anymore  :(
Money drugs and bitches

Migs

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #7 on: May 11, 2007, 02:30:52 PM »
can't trust vegetaians, it's not normal.  Hey our own FDA sucks and is undermanned in most respects.  What doesn't kill you makes you stronger.

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Re: Chicken from China?!?!
« Reply #8 on: May 11, 2007, 03:51:17 PM »
latimes.com    
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-petfood9may09,0,6710026.story?coll=la-ho
FOOD PRODUCTS

Gluten factory had a toxic history
By Don Lee and Abigail Goldman

May 9, 2007

XUZHOU, CHINA — Before Mao Lijun's business exported tainted wheat products that may have killed American pets, his factory sickened people and plants around here for years.

Farmers in this poor rural area about 400 miles northwest of Shanghai had complained to local government officials since 2004 that Mao's factory was spewing noxious fumes that made their eyes tear up and the poplar trees nearby shed their leaves prematurely. Yet no one stopped Mao's company from churning out bags of food powders and belching smoke — until one day last month when, in the middle of the night, bulldozers arrived and tore down the facility.

It wasn't authorities that finally acted: Mao himself razed the brick factory — days before the investigators from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration arrived in China on a mission to track down the source of the tainted pet food ingredients.

In the end, Chinese authorities caught up with Mao and arrested him. And Tuesday, after weeks of denials, China acknowledged that Mao's company and another Chinese business had illegally exported wheat and rice products spiked with melamine, a chemical used in making plastics and fertilizers. That chemical is banned in foods in the U.S.

China's watchdog agency said the businesses had added melamine to the food ingredients "in a bid to meet the contractual demand for the amount of protein in the products." Melamine can make animal feed appear to have more protein than it actually does.

Besides turning up in pet food, melamine has been found in feed for thousands of hogs and millions of chickens in the U.S. The FDA said Tuesday that melamine-contaminated foods also were fed to fish raised for human consumption. But in each case, U.S. officials said there was little risk to human health.

The FDA also said that although the tainted Chinese products were labeled as wheat gluten and rice protein, they were actually ordinary wheat flour — with melamine and related nitrogen-rich compounds.

Melamine producers in China have said that melamine scrap, a cheaper form of the chemical, has been widely sold to entrepreneurs who use it to fool farmers into thinking that they are getting higher-nutrient animal feeds. Among the apparent buyers of melamine scrap were Mao, head of Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Co., and Binzhou Futian Biology Technology Co. in Shandong province.

Liu Zhaoyi, 64, a farmer who lives next to Mao's now-demolished factory, recalled seeing globs of white and yellowish scrap, which may have included melamine, piled in the yard behind the plant.

One season after rains, Liu said, water with residue from the compound flowed into his family's cornfields and killed the crops.

"He gave me only 100 yuan when my corn was all dead," Liu said of Mao. That is the equivalent of about $13 today.

Few people in town, which has a large food manufacturing industry, seemed to know what Mao's factory made.

An Environment Protection Bureau official in Pei county, which is a part of Xuzhou, said one of his colleagues had visited Mao's facility in recent years when it was processing yeast and wheat. The inspection did not turn up any serious violations, and neighbors were told to complain to a court or another agency.

In recent days, Mao's company removed wheat gluten from the product offerings on its website. It also deleted something called ESB protein powder.

Xuzhou Anying had advertised the powder as its "latest researched, developed and produced" item and touted it as "a new way to solve the problem of shortage of protein resource." Several people with experience in China's food industry say such powders are invariably made with melamine.

Melamine itself isn't considered particularly toxic, but researchers believe that another compound, cyanuric acid, may also have been added to the pet food ingredients by Chinese firms or formed as a byproduct. Combined with melamine, it can cause a chemical reaction — forming crystals and blocking kidney function in some animals.

Cai Kesen, president of No. 1 Flour Factory of Pei county, said unadulterated wheat gluten from China certainly would not have caused a scandal. The quality of the region's wheat last year was the best in a decade, he said.

Cai vaguely recalled meeting Mao once. His company was small, he said, and it was common for such businesses to add words like "biologic" and "technology" to their names to get government subsidies intended for advanced enterprises.

Xuzhou Anying's website posted certificates claiming, among other things, that it had won top quality grades from various organizations, none of which could be verified.

China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said Tuesday that Xuzhou Anying and Binzhou Futian had evaded quality checks by labeling their products as exports not subject to inspection.

Farmer Liu said it was a shame that officials failed to heed earlier complaints. "If they had done more, this company won't have such a big problem."

don.lee@latimes.com

abigail.goldman@latimes.com

Lee reported from Xuzhou and Goldman from Los Angeles.