Warning issued on baby formula

karicareBEIJING — China’s consumer quality watchdog issued a warning yesterday over two potentially tainted New Zealand-made Karicare-brand infant formula products because of botulism concerns. The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) issued a consumer alert after receiving a warning notice from the New  Zealand Embassy in China at midnight Sunday.

In the notice, New Zealand’s Minister for Primary Industries advised consumers to suspend the  consumption of the two potentially contaminated products. However, the minister did not say whether or not they will recall them.
The products are Karicare stages 1 and 2 infant formula.

AQSIQ said it has urged the New Zealand government to check and provide detailed information of potentially tainted products. It issued a similar warning for three batches of Karicare-brand dairy products and announced a list of four companies that have imported potentially contaminated products from New Zealand dairy company Fonterra on 4 August.

Shanghai-based Dumex Baby Food Co., Ltd., one of the four Chinese companies on the list, has sealed up potentially tainted dairy raw materials and products and initiated preemptive recalls on 4 August, according to Shanghai quality authorities.

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra announced on 2 August that tests of some ingredients used in infant formula and sports drinks have turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism, a rare but sometimes fatal paralytic illness caused by a nerve toxin.

This is the second contamination issue involving Fonterra this year. In January, dicyandiamde, a potentially toxic chemical, was found in some of its products.

Fonterra’s chief executive, Theo Spierings apologised yesterday for the contamination scare at a media briefing in Beijing.
“There is no need for public panic as no illnesses have been reported yet, but the scandal may urge Chinese consumers to rethink their unsuspecting favour for foreign-branded baby formulas,” said Wang Dingmian, former director of the Dairy Association of China.

Foreign-branded infant formula has become a premium commodity in China since Chinese dairy company Sanlu was found to have added kidney-damaging melamine to bulk up   formulas.   It   caused   six   deaths and hundreds of illnesses in 2008.

“Actually many Chinese testing and technologies excel those of New Zealand, as China has a rather strict testing system on dairy products,” Wang said.

Zhang Dezhong, general manager of Henan-based Sansege Dairy Company, said the authorities carried out compulsory tests on 25 items throughout production of milk powder since 2008 and many companies had extra tests to ensure product quality.

“Due to poor cooperation among supervision bodies, there are loopholes in some links,” said Chen Lianfang, a dairy industry analyst.
The incident may not dent the Chinese consumer’s favour for foreign-brand baby formula too much. It may only add to confusion on choosing dairy brands, Chen said.

Liu   Suwen, mother of a two-year-old  baby,   said it has  been a headache to find the right  milk powder   for   her   baby   after   the   Fonterra scandal. “I have changed five brands of baby formula, and now I have almost lost confidence in foreign as well as Chinese milk powder products,” she said.

To win back consumer trust, Chinese diary enterprises should learn lessons and implement top safety standards. — Xinhua.

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