GUANGZHOU, May 07, 2009 (Xinhua via COMTEX) --
Visitors were scarce at the
Guangdong Dongtai Dairy Products booth during the third phase of
the 105th China Import and Export Fair, also called the Canton
Fair.
The third phase of China's largest trade event began here
Sunday and ended Thursday.
Xu Haoming, who's in charge of external trade for Dongtai, said
he wasn't surprised by the lack of visitors.
Based in the Jiedong economic development zone of south China's
Guangdong Province, Dongtai specializes in dairy products such as
baby milk powder. It exports to Asian and African countries.
Demand has fallen because of the global downturn, but that's
common to all industries, said Xu. The dairy industry has an
additional problem.
"The blow to Chinese food businesses from food safety problems
such as the melamine contamination scandal last year" has been
almost fatal, said Xu.
The melamine-adulteration milk and baby formula scandal, which
left six infants dead and almost 300,000 ill, came to light last
September. It had a swift impact on China's dairy product exports.
According to the General Administration of Customs, dairy
exports dropped 10.4 percent last year to 121,000 tonnes after the
scandal made the headlines.
Xu said his company's exports are down 50 percent.
"The melamine contamination scandal has passed, but its
negative impact lingers. There is a trust crisis for the Chinese
dairy products industry," said Xu, "What concerns me most at the
moment is how the credibility of Chinese food could be restored."
Dongtai is not the only company in China to feel the impact of
concern over food-safety problems.
Century International, a trading company based in east China's
Dalian City, Liaoning Province, didn't bring milk powder to the
Canton Fair.
Han Wenjun, the commercial representative of Century
International, explained that many countries, especially those in
Europe, the United States and Japan, had raised standards for food
imports after the melamine scandal. His company's export business
had essentially vanished, he said, and the firm had been forced to
shift to importing milk powder to survive.
Yue Jianping with Jinghong Foodstuffs, based in Quanzhou City,
east China's Fujian Province, said the melamine scandal had
tarnished the image of the entire Chinese food industry.
"The lollipops made by my company are free of toxic substances
such as melamine, but we've felt the sting of the scandal and
still have to make explanations from time to time," said Yue.
Thousands or even tens of thousands of companies might face
similar questions. As of 2008, China had an estimated 500,000
"large-scale" food processing companies, along with 350,000 small
and medium-sized ones, and more than 20 million privately owned
businesses producing and selling food products. Authorities last
year investigated an average of 200 fake food cases a day, mainly
among smaller producers.
Chinese produce, fish and dairy items are rapidly becoming part
of the global food chain. Food exports totaled 31 billion U.S.
dollars from January to November 2008, up 13.8 percent from the
same period in 2007.
CREDIBILITY CRISIS
Xu said his company tried during the Canton fair to get the
message out to overseas clients that most Chinese food was safe,
and food scandals were sporadic and caused by a few businesses.
Ye Caihong with Aixin Foodstuff of Xiamen City, Fujian, said
her company had tightened product quality control and inspection
this year.
Liu Dawei, deputy manager with the external trade department of
Linjin Food Industry of Anhui Province, said the credibility
crisis had forced Chinese food businesses to pay more attention to
product quality control.
Liu said his company, a jelly maker, had opened a technical
research and development center this year and improved quality
monitoring and testing.
IMAGE IMPROVEMENT
The government has taken steps to improve food safety.
The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress,
China's top legislature, adopted a Food Safety Law in late
February. The law stipulates that "only those items proved to be
safe and necessary in food production are allowed to be listed as
food additives."
The law, which will take effect on June 1, also says food
producers may only use approved additives. Companies that break
the law face possible temporary or permanent closure.
Also, the Ministry of Health issued a circular in March to its
local offices, urging them to step up prevention of food
contamination and monitoring of food-borne illnesses. The circular
covered the 16 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities
where food problems have been most prevalent.
Health Minister Chen Zhu said the ministry would create a
national database covering food contamination and food-borne
illnesses within two years. He also ordered hospitals and other
health organizations to report food poisoning and other
food-related illnesses promptly.
Huo Jianguo, chairman of the China Chamber of Commerce for
Import and Export of Foodstuffs, Native Produce and Animal
By-Product, said his organization had introduced new management
methods to improve food safety.
These methods include encouraging and supporting processing
businesses to build fixed ties with raw material suppliers and
encouraging collective procurement.
Some Chinese companies have embarked on construction of a food
safety monitoring chain.
Fan Xiaoshan, manager with the tomato and fruit marketing
department of COFCO Xinjiang Tunhe, said it was imperative to
exercise a full process of monitoring system from farmland to
table to ensure food safety.
Although dairy exporters are still struggling, some foreign
markets have reopened.
Xu noted that Turkey had lifted its ban on Chinese milk powder
and the milk powder traded by his company had been allowed to
reenter the market there.
<<XINHUA NEWS AGENCY -- 05/08/2009>>