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May 23, 2007

Food Safety Briefing: Restrictions on Imported Food Urged; Trade Ambassador Pressured; A Florida Family Reels; From Whence Cometh Garlic?

[by litbrit]

U.S. Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana, in letters to President Bush and the head of the FDA Monday, called for a crackdown on exporters sending adulterated and otherwise toxic or dangerous food, medicines, and ingredients into the United States:

WASHINGTON – The United States should yank away the “welcome” sign for many Chinese food and medicine ingredients, Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., told President Bush and the head of the Food and Drug Administration in letters he sent Monday. Recent animal deaths have been blamed on pet food containing an ingredient imported from China that was contaminated with melamine, a plastic precursor used as a fertilizer. Feed tainted with the same imported ingredient was sent to 38 Hoosier poultry operations.

[...] Even though scientists have concluded that the risk to humans from the chickens fed the tainted feed is very low, Bayh told Bush that the episode illustrates how vulnerable U.S. consumers are “to potentially poisonous agents that may be intentionally delivered to American citizens.” In a letter to FDA Commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach, Bayh said the FDA should consider restricting Chinese exports of food and medicine ingredients “until it can be established that its bulk ingredients meet U.S. health and safety standards.” Bayh did not say how the guarantee would be met.

I'm glad another Senator has added his voice to the small-but-growing chorus of criticisms surrounding the regulatory agency (the FDA) that by its own admission inspects only 1% (or "less than 2%", depending on who's talking) of all imports; I'm especially heartened to hear Bayh point out the melamine elephant in the room--that is, how unnervingly vulnerable we are--and even utter the phrase "...potentially poisonous agents [that may be] intentionally delivered to American citizens”.  Senator Dick Durbin, D-Ill. and Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro, D-CT continue to address food safety and consumer information issues: Senator Durbin testified before Congress about the FDA's current state--there are too many imports pouring in for agents who are far too few in number,  to name just one obvious problem--and Congresswoman DeLauro urged the enactment of tougher product labeling laws, including Country Of Origin Labeling (COOL) and clear notification if a meat or poultry product came from a cloned animal or its progeny. On May 10th, the two leaders co-wrote a terse and forthright letter to U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab (my emphasis):

Dear Ambassador Schwab: We are writing in light of the recently discovered contamination of imported wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate used to manufacture pet food in the United States. [...]

The safety of food imports from China extends beyond the pet food recall. China is especially poor at meeting international food safety standards, which is particularly disturbing considering that China exported approximately $2.26 billion in agricultural products to the United States in 2006. A recent news article noted that, in February, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) blocked the entry of several food products from China because they contained banned additives, were tainted by pesticides or were contaminated with salmonella. Some products were simply unsanitary.

The U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) is involved in these matters because regional, bilateral, and international trade agreements entered into by the United States often include sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures. For example, there are two World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements that deal with food safety and animal and plant health and safety. We understand that these provisions allow countries to set their own standards but require countries to base regulations on science and encourage countries to use international guidelines where they exist.

Our concern is whether the USTR has the ability to challenge the sanitary and phytosanitary standards of our trading partners based on evidence that they are not meeting international standards and may be endangering public health in the United States.

This issue is particularly important as U.S. agricultural imports are predicted to reach a record $69 billion in FY 2007. If we are to continue at this rate, we must ask important questions about the food safety standards of our trade partners to ensure our nation's public health is not compromised.

Developing countries often lack sufficient regulations, monitoring, and enforcement of SPS regulations. China, for instance, has come under scrutiny in the past for an overall lack of transparency and failure to properly adhere to SPS measures required by the World Trade Organization.

While we understand the importance of the United States' involvement in international trade, participation in these trade relations should not come at the expense of animal or human health.

Therefore, we request answers to the following questions—   

1) What sanitary and phytosanitary measures are included in current free trade agreements and other permanent trade relations in which the United States is currently engaged?

2) What legal recourse does the United States possess with respect to imported food products that pose a threat to public health, in the event that the country where the offending product originated is not cooperative?

Incidentally, neither of the two Senators from Florida--Mel Martinez (R) and Bill Nelson (D)--mentions food safety or labeling issues on his or her website, though the Sunshine State has an obvious stake in both issues: in terms of the size of its contribution to Florida's GDP, agriculture is second only to tourism.  And many Floridians, along with families and farmers in the other 49 states, have already been profoundly affected by the melamine-adulterated pet food and animal feed.  This family, for example:

If it's not trips to the vet, it's the nightly ritual of injecting a feeding tube intravenously into the animals. Without the daily fluid pack that hangs above the laundry room dryer, Libby faces certain death.

Two of their four cats already have died. All four have suffered kidney disease their veterinarian attributes to contaminated pet food.

The food, Nutro Max Gourmet Classics, did not appear at first on the ever-growing national recall list, and Cmar thought all was well. But then Nutro Max's manufacturer issued a recall, and Gourmet Classics joined hundreds of other products being blamed for the illness and deaths of thousands of cats and dogs nationwide.

Cmar has spent almost $10,000 trying to save Libby and her family's three other cats. Cmar, who runs a small business from home, charged much of it to her Visa card.

As bills mount, she finds herself at a crossroads: continue spending thousands to save Libby? Or does that just prolong the animal's suffering?

"I'm an anxiety-ridden mess," says Cmar, as she weighs the financial issues and the concern that her 4-year-old son, Matthew, and 1-year-old daughter, Maudaline, won't understand the continued loss of their pets.

Lastly, a recent USA Today article about food safety and questionable imports offers some  interesting data:

The overall dollar figures for food imports into the USA from China are high — $29 million worth of fresh or frozen fruit and $131 million worth of fresh or frozen vegetables in 2006, according to the USDA. But "the share of the U.S. food supply that comes from China is tiny, probably less than 1%," said Fred Gale, a senior economist with the China team at the USDA's Economic Research Service.

[...]

But that doesn't mean the average American isn't eating food from China, and some surprising ones at that. If you season with garlic, sip apple juice, spread honey or savor fish dishes, there's a good chance you're buying food from China.

Garlic: More than 50%

China produces 75% of the world's garlic, according to the FAO. Last year was the first year in which U.S. consumers bought more garlic produced in China than garlic grown in California, said Bill Christopher, owner of Christopher Ranch, a major grower of garlic in Gilroy, Calif. California grows "99.9% of U.S. garlic," he said.

"There were roughly 150 million pounds of fresh and peeled garlic from California sold in the U.S. in 2006 and 170 million pounds from China," he said.

Chinese garlic is easily recognized, he said. "In California we cut the roots off but we leave a little bit of a brush. In Chinese garlic they cut the root plate off flat, with no brush."

California garlic farmer, author, and English professor Chester Aaron recommends seeking out domestically-grown garlic:

...thanks to a persistent garlic fungus in the nutrient-robbed soil, rock-bottom pricing and a loophole in U.S. trade law, most of the garlic sold in the United States has been grown in foreign soil. China grows two-thirds of the world's garlic, while California is currently responsible for just two percent.

[...]

China has been the particular focus of legislation designed to prevent "dumping," in which exporters introduce garlic to the U.S. market at prices significantly lower than their stated production costs. At the urging of American farmers, federal trade officials agreed to levy a 377 percent duty on imported garlic in 1994. Under pressure from free-trade advocates, officials revised the ruling a year later, to lower tariffs on "new" shippers who were not involved in the original investigation. Foreign shippers have had to merely form new companies in order to avoid the tariffs, thereby freeing themselves to continue dumping their product into the U.S. market. Accordingly, the volume of Chinese garlic in the U.S. market has increased more than ten-fold since 2000, forcing California garlic farmers to sell off vast tracts of land in order to survive. Since 2001, Christopher Ranch has put 40 percent of its garlic fields out of commission.

Aaron says that China, along with fellow exporters Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador and Mexico, are all using pesticides and herbicides banned in, and inherited from, the United States. "There aren't enough inspectors at the borders to check all the garlic that comes in from around the world, and the chances are that what you buy in most markets has been heavily sprayed," says Aaron. He recalls happening upon a bushel basket of purple-skinned garlic in a local organic grocery a few years ago. A shop clerk told him it had been organically grown in Monterrey, but he recognized the "grower's" name as an importer who sells Mexican garlic. Aaron bought a bulb and passed it along to a chemist friend at Berkeley. A few days later she called to tell him that the supposedly organic garlic contained several varieties of chemicals banned in the U.S. A representative from the Food and Drug Administration, contacted for this story, reports that there are no instances on record of garlic shipments from Mexico being turned away because they've contained banned sprays, which neither confirms nor refutes Aaron's claim. "The best advice I can give is to buy from a reputable farmer or grow your own," says Aaron.

Until we have mandatory labels here in the States, concerned consumers will have to ask the friendly produce manager about the origins of the store's garlic inventory or take their chances with pesticide residue on the imported bulbs--pesticide that may well be banned, or in the process of being phased-out, in the U.S., but which the chemical giants continue to produce and sell to farmers abroad, who in turn apply it to garlic and other produce that winds up back in America's food chain.

More on the issue of pesticide inheriting soon.

(H/T JayMonster; Lisa in Baltimore.)

Also at Shakesville.

May 23, 2007 in Trade | Permalink

Comments

Uh, Oh. I know that the peeled garlic I have bought from Trader Joe's comes from china, the peeled garlic I buy from whole foods is mysteriously unlabled. But one can be pretty sure that if China is producing 75% of the world's garlic that 100 percent of what I buy, not living in CA, is from China.

I've become addicted to peeled garlic and I figured that the labor costs meant it came from china but I hadn't started to worry about it yet. Now I have.

aimai

Posted by: aimai | May 23, 2007 7:03:46 PM

aimai, in the first story about garlic (USA today) the grower mentions that US (California) farmers usually leave a little of the rootball on the bulb, whereas Chinese growers customarily cut it off flat. Of course, root hairs on your garlic it not a guarantee that you've got domestic goods. Perhaps you might ask the Whole Paycheck Foods produce manager to find out the country of origin for you.

P.S. Whole garlic tastes much better, I think; the older (and preserved cloves) in a jar of the peeled stuff tend to get quite sharp and bitter. The easiest way to peel it is also stress-relieving: lay the clove on its side, place the flat side of a heavy chef's knife on top, holding it steady with one hand, and smack the flat of the blade with the heel of your other hand. Not too hard, or you'll obliterate the clove! Just hard enough to split the paper sheath, which should now fall off easily.

Posted by: litbrit | May 23, 2007 7:22:22 PM

litbrit,

I actually know how to peel a garlic clove. I use so much, and cook such elaborate meals on such short time frames that I found the pre-peeled ones to be a godsend. And I got sick of the waste of the heads lying around. I find I run through a box of Whole Foods cloves in a week and there's no waste. I also have not found them to be bitter or dried out. I'm talking about the whole peeled ones not the chopped stuff which I would never buy.

aimai

Posted by: aimai | May 23, 2007 8:10:39 PM

thank you, litbrit...for this article.
by the way, i recently read that china is also the largest and almost sole supplier of vitamin c.
.....i have pretty much switched back to my fruitarian ways, and am hoping that there will still be fruits to eat in the future.
...otherwise, i will return to fairy ways and dine on the exotic proteins of cobwebs, if there will still be spiders to spin them.

Posted by: jacqueline | May 23, 2007 8:23:05 PM

aimai, you are lucky to have Whole Foods, then. No such luck in lowly St. Pete--not until someone does a feasibility study and determines that enough of us meet their demographics. Sarasota, our richer and older neighbor to the south, has a WF. I'm sure Miami does, too. Anyway, you can buy prepackaged peeled stuff at Publix (a good supermarket chain in our area) but it doesn't sound like the same garlic you refer to and I don't think you'd like it.

jacqueline, you're most welcome. I read that about vitamin C, too--apparently the last vitamin C producer in the US shut down a year or two ago. Thanks, free trade! I'm going to send you a link a bit later, when all is quiet and I can sort through my bookmarks.

Posted by: litbrit | May 23, 2007 8:42:26 PM

Seriously, I'm not budging from my Big Mac. I was tempted by some vegan friends but not now.
Killer garlic laced with melamine....who knew?

Posted by: calmo | May 23, 2007 9:51:25 PM

Maybe that's why all the garlic in the stores has already sprouted by the time I see it.

See, it's not just about China. It's about distance, and what we do to our produce in order to make it able to travel so far without (noticeable) effects.

And, it's about the relentless pursuit of profit at the expense of everything else.

Posted by: Stephen | May 23, 2007 10:08:54 PM

Garlic is about the easiest thing in the world to grow at home. Just stick the clove in the ground, point up, in the fall, and pull it up next summer. I've got about forty bulbs occupying half of a 6x6 raised bed, and I expect them to last most of a year.

If it's actually profitable to ship something this cheap and easily grown halfway around the world, that surely says something about how heavily subsidized both long-distance shipping and agribusiness are. Come to think of it, it might also tell us something about the solution to this problem: instead of more regulation and inspection, how about just cutting the agribusiness corporations from off the taxpayer teat. When all costs are internalized in price, it's probably cheaper to buy stuff grown where you live.

Posted by: Kevin Carson | May 23, 2007 11:28:22 PM

Kevin, not only is it cheaper, it is infinitely safer. As Stephen has pointed out, the further something has to travel, the more hands that touch it and the more chance it will be contaminated or adulterated or somehow compromised.

And here's something very important: buying local means buying green, too. Garlic that's shipped halfway around the world has a much bigger carbon footprint than the garlic you're growing in the 6x6 bed in your garden, which, if it has even a tiny bit of active photosynthesis going on, is carbon-absorbing.

If people can come at me and accuse me of being protectionist and xenophobic when I suggest that buying locally is better, I think I'm going to start pointing out how much fuel it takes to move a bargeload of SeaLand containers full of wheat gluten and antifreeze and bug-sprayed garlic across an ocean and along thousands of miles of highway.

Posted by: litbrit | May 23, 2007 11:57:15 PM

"garlic is about the easiest thing to grow at home."

i really think that more and more people are going to start growing fruits, vegetables and herbs as concerns and mistrust about the safety of our food continues to mount.
...i think there is going to be a reawakening of interest in this, and in canning and preserving as well.

Posted by: jacqueline | May 24, 2007 1:02:05 AM

Evan Bayh insinuating that the Chinese may be intentionally poisoning us seems incredibly demagogic to me. Imports from China in general are a hot issue & I'm sad to see unscrupulous politicans use the recent pet food crisis as a casus belli for their other protectionist causes.

As for the fact that most Garlic is grown in China, who cares? I think Country of Origin labels are fine, that way foodies can bettwe determine whether or not they want to buy a certain product, but for the rest of us who could care less where our garlic is grown, let us be.

Posted by: DRR | May 24, 2007 3:37:07 AM

Well, DRR, forcing information on someone who isn't interested is hardly a harm, you can just close your eyes as you buy stuff. But the more important point, I think, is that forcing all consumers to bear the true costs (in externalities, for non-slave labor, for the price of fuel, for pollution) would at least *spread the cost* fairly among all consumers. If only the well informed try to transfer their consumption patterns to local growers there a) wno't be enough local growers to meet demand and b) the prices for locally produced foods will skyrocket beyond what ordinary people can pay.

Whole foods is a trap. They bought up all the little local organic stores and often the produce they sell isn't organic at all--they label it "conventional." I don't think that is merely because they are a big, evil, corporation I think there just isn't enough locally grown organic stuff available for their large market. and they've found that people are already in the store shopping for organic produce and are willing to pay inflated prices for "conventional" in order not to have to go to two stores. So its a bit of a bait and switch without the actual criminal liability of selling conventioanl produce onder an organic label.

But I love my peeled garlic. I throw it into everything.

aimai

Posted by: aimai | May 24, 2007 7:02:23 AM

aimai, I've never been in one, but it sounds like WF do the same thing as our health food store, a small place that sells both organic and "natural" (which is meaningless) foods.

That said, I disagree that there aren't enough growers. I mean, there isn't enough selection of organic food--at Publix, which has a decent-sized section catering to it--I hear other mothers complaining nonstop that they wish there were more kinds of apples, more organic nuts, more kinds of veggies beyond lettuce and broccoli, more everything.

The small, family-owned growers and nurseries, as I've said here (and elsewhere) before, do NOT get subsidies or block grants or tax breaks. What is necessary, if we're going to completely rework our food sourcing system now, is the same kind of incentive and support for growers of local food that Govt. currently extends to subsidies and tax cuts for multinationals who "produce" food (as in, put together ingredients they import).

Evan Bayh insinuating that the Chinese may be intentionally poisoning us

DRR, where does he say that? Allowing for our possible differences in dialect or sytax, I still read the article, which says Bayh told Bush that the episode illustrates how vulnerable U.S. consumers are “to potentially poisonous agents that may be intentionally delivered to American citizens.", as saying that this entire food-adulteration episode shows how easy it would be harm Americans through our food supply.

He is correct: with only 1% of imports even inspected (and that's predicated on the FDA knowing what they're looking at and/or what to look for), we are extremely vulnerable.

Do you even know what gets sprayed on produce in some countries? Organophosphates, for one thing. They are a class of neurotoxin (wiki it). And you can't wash off much of the poison, because it is within the tissue of the plant, having been applied to the soil or media in which it grew.

But you're welcome to keep eating it. Some of us choose otherwise.

Posted by: litbrit | May 24, 2007 7:45:20 AM

(That should have been, I disagree that there aren't enough willing growers. There aren't! Because they can't compete with third-world imports and subsidized agribusiness. But that can change, and I hope it will.)

Posted by: litbrit | May 24, 2007 10:49:28 AM

Whole Foods is nice and all, but I can't afford to shop there. Plus, so much of the store is given over to supplements that would seem outlandish to the pharmacies and stores I went to in Korea. My goal is to have food that will suffice for my family's nutritional needs, not to rely upon 45 different compounds that I have to take every day.

Though, I will shop there for the cheese, and will pay the extra cost. WF's cheese is amazing.

Posted by: Stephen | May 24, 2007 12:11:28 PM

Well, DRR, forcing information on someone who isn't interested is hardly a harm, you can just close your eyes as you buy stuff.

I never said it was. I said I was in FAVOR of COO labels or any other labels for that matter that provide more information about the product

If only the well informed try to transfer their consumption patterns to local growers there a) wno't be enough local growers to meet demand and b) the prices for locally produced foods will skyrocket beyond what ordinary people can pay.

Not to be crass but...so? A situation where the well-informed, or more specifically the people willing to go out of their way to purchase certain produce locally as a manner of quality control are already greatly outnumbered by those who have no such prejudice. What do you suggest? That "everyone else" be forced to follow the same grocery shopping protocols for the convenience of the foodies? Seems a little much to me.

Posted by: DRR | May 24, 2007 5:08:52 PM

DRR, where does he say that? Allowing for our possible differences in dialect or sytax, I still read the article, which says Bayh told Bush that the episode illustrates how vulnerable U.S. consumers are “to potentially poisonous agents that may be intentionally delivered to American citizens.", as saying that this entire food-adulteration episode shows how easy it would be harm Americans through our food supply.

On second reading, your interpretation is probably the correct one.

Do you even know what gets sprayed on produce in some countries?

I'm certain a number of nasty substances are used which would make a person with a predilection to know/care about such things, and buy locally for superior quality/taste features, likely never to consume them. And I don't suggest such concerns are only trivial. However dilligently the FDA may be inspecting the food, if the FDA deems it dangerous, I don't want it here, but if whatever is used grow, treat, preserve said produce is ok with them, than it's ok with me. There's the risk that something deemed harmless by the FDA actually turns out to be rather bad for you or potentially sickening, in which case I'll come off pretty bad (healthwise), but I really don't feel I'm taking a big gamble.

We usually eat spaghetti once a week & as a result we buy a lot of cheap, and I imagine not too high quality garlic from the local grocery store, that is more than likely imported from China. Not to mention eating out (I work at the Olive Garden) and all the other generic products that sometimes contain garlic we consume. Now one or all of us might get some kind of neurocancer or something down the line, but considering our, or at least my poisonous garlic consumption habits, we seem in pretty good health (shrug).

But you're welcome to keep eating it. Some of us choose otherwise.

Hey, 'Live & Let Live' didn't become a famous idiom for nuthin.

Posted by: DRR | May 24, 2007 5:39:49 PM

DRR,

You have a very interesting but somewhat naieve take on things. As a consumer of non-local produce in a global market we all are dependent on the kindness of strangers and the good faith efforts of our servants/employees in the federal government. The point of the recent scandal with imports from china is that it reveals that 1) you can't depend on strangers to have your best interests at heart and 2) you can't depend on the FDA to carry out the task they have been given. Your "confidence" is misplaced. That you have been "in pretty good health" so far is neither here nor there. The Panamanian victims of the poisoned medicine and toothpaste were, no doubt, in pretty good condition too before they were poisoned.

Litbrit has drawn our attention to a systemic problem that, like many systemic problems, probably lurks below the level of immiediate serious mortal harm--but only until the population ages enough or the toxins build up enough for some kind of retroactive study to reveal just what those dangers were. But do you really want to wake up and find yourself and your family in another minimata (massive mercury poisoning).

Your attitude seems to be "what, me worry?" I think that is commendable when it reflects a realistic appraisal of the dangers of the situation but its nothing but wilful ostrichness in the face of the kinds of systemic scandals that are coming to light. A single poisoning incident is an accident. A string of them is a systemic problem. Failing to address that as a consumer and placing your faith in our guardians is, perhaps, inevitable in a big complex system like ours. But the folly of thinking that you aren't "taking a big gamble" with your health and your family's health has been amply demonstrated over the last few weeks.

aimai

Posted by: aimai | May 24, 2007 6:30:59 PM

i think that is an excellent post, aimai.

Posted by: jacqueline | May 24, 2007 10:38:51 PM

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波纹托盘
镀锌托盘
南京托盘
上海托盘
北京托盘
广州托盘
托盘
钢托盘
钢制托盘
铁托盘
塑料托盘
木托盘
纸托盘
木塑托盘
柱式托盘
波纹板托盘
镀锌托盘
南京托盘
上海托盘
北京托盘
广州托盘


托盘
钢托盘
钢制托盘
托盘
塑料托盘

Posted by: judy | Oct 8, 2007 8:05:44 AM

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