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FDA Inspecting 'Only a Minuscule' Percentage of Imported Foods
WASHINGTON - Just 1.3 percent of imported fish, vegetables, fruit and other foods are inspected - yet those government inspections regularly reveal food unfit for human consumption.Frozen catfish from China, beans from Belgium, jalapenos from Peru, blackberries from Guatemala, baked goods from Canada, India and the Philippines - the list of tainted food detained at the border by the Food and Drug Administration stretches on.
Add to that the contaminated Chinese wheat gluten that poisoned cats and dogs nationwide and led to a massive pet food recall, and you've got a real international pickle. Does the United States have the wherewithal to ensure the food it imports is safe?
Food safety experts say no.
With only a minuscule percentage of shipments inspected, they say the nation is vulnerable to harm from abroad, where rules and regulations governing food production are often more lax than they are at home.
"FDA doesn't have enough resources or control over this situation presently," said Mike Doyle (news, bio, voting record), director of the University of Georgia's Center for Food Safety, which works with industry to improve safety.
Last month alone, FDA detained nearly 850 shipments of grains, fish, vegetables, nuts, spice, oils and other imported foods for issues ranging from filth to unsafe food coloring to contamination with pesticides to salmonella.
And that's with just 1.3 percent of the imports inspected. As for the other 98.7 percent, it's not inspected, much less detained, and goes to feed the nation's growing appetite for imported foods.
Each year, the average American eats about 260 pounds of imported foods, including processed, ready-to-eat products and single ingredients. Imports account for about 13 percent of the annual diet.
"Never before in history have we had the sort of system that we have now, meaning a globalization of the food supply," said Robert Brackett, director of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.
FDA inspections focus on foods known to be at risk for contamination, including fish, shellfish, fruit and vegetables. Food from countries or producers previously shown to be problematic also are flagged for a closer look.
Consider this list of Chinese products detained by the FDA just in the last month: frozen catfish tainted with illegal veterinary drugs, fresh ginger polluted with pesticides, melon seeds contaminated with a cancer-causing toxin and filthy dried dates.
But even foods expected to be safe can harbor unexpected perils. Take wheat gluten: Grains and grain byproducts like it are rarely eaten raw and generally pose few health risks, since cooking kills bacteria and other pathogens.
Even so, the FDA can't say for sure whether the ingredient used in the pet foods was inspected after it arrived from China. And if the wheat gluten was, officials said, it wouldn't have been tested for melamine. Even though the chemical isn't allowed in food for pets or people, in any quantity, it previously wasn't believed toxic.
How did the melamine wind up in the wheat gluten? Investigators still don't know. Meanwhile, China is struggling to overhaul its food system and improve safety standards, but still faces major hurdles.
Farmers use pesticides and chemical fertilizers to build produce yields and antibiotics are used on seafood and livestock. Heavy metals also can be introduced into the food chain by widespread industrial pollution.
Increasingly, those foods are sold in a now global marketplace.
While the European Union, Canada and Mexico still top the list of food exporters to the U.S., China is coming up fast. Since 1997, the value of Chinese food imports, including commodities like wheat gluten, has more than tripled, to $2.1 billion from $644 million, according to Agriculture Department statistics. It accounts for 3.3 percent of the total food the U.S. buys abroad.
For suspect imported products - and wheat gluten is now one of them - the FDA issues alerts to its inspectors. The FDA flags Chinese food and other imported products it regulates, like cosmetics, for that extra scrutiny more than any other country except Mexico.
To safeguard its export business, China is looking at separating foods by their ultimate destination, domestic or foreign, according to Michiel Keyzer, director of the Center for World Food Studies at Amsterdam's Vrije Universiteit.
U.S. government statistics suggest China still has a way to go.
The FDA has been stopping Chinese food import shipments at the rate of about 200 per month this year. Shippers have the right to appeal the detentions, after which the government can order products returned or destroyed.
How do you know the origin of the food you eat? The 2002 Farm Act called for fish, fruit and vegetable imports to be labeled by country of origin, though implementation for the latter two foods has been delayed.
Meanwhile, the U.S. imports more and more, though the increase in value is partially due to the weaker dollar.
All told, the U.S. is expected to import a record $70 billion in agricultural products for the 12 months ending in September, according to an Agriculture Department forecast. The value of those imports will be about double the nearly $36 billion purchased overseas in 1997.
Contributing to that growth are the fresh fruits and vegetables imported during the offseason, when domestic production dwindles or ends.
About one-quarter of our fruit, both fresh and frozen, is imported. For tree nuts, it's about half. And for fish and shellfish, more than two-thirds come from overseas.
Even as the amount of imported food increased, the percentage of FDA inspections declined - from 1.8 percent in 2003 to 1.3 percent this year to an expected 1.1 percent next year.
"Inspections have a very important role but they're not the solution. They are the verification," FDA commissioner Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach said.
The FDA and the USDA have adopted a "risk-based" inspection philosophy, focusing on specific foods, sources or producers that they believe represent the largest potential risk to the public's health.
"The public at large is not at any increased risk," said Craig Henry, senior vice president and chief operating officer for scientific and regulatory affairs of the Grocery Manufacturers-Food Products Association, an industry group.
Caroline Smith DeWaal, director of food safety at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group, countered that "risk-based" is just shorthand for "reduced resources."
"Whenever they say 'risk-based approach,' it often means they don't have enough staff to actually do the job. They're doing triage. They're trying to hit what's most important to inspect but they're missing a lot," DeWaal said.
Groups lobbying to increase the FDA's budget say its spending on food safety has languished, despite the agency's outsized role in ensuring the safety of the nation's food supply.
A recent Government Accountability Office report noted that most of the $1.7 billion the federal government allocates to food safety goes to the USDA, which is responsible for regulating about 20 percent of the food supply. The FDA, responsible for most of the other 80 percent, gets about 24 percent of the total spent on food safety.
Unlike the FDA, the USDA requires foreign inspection certificates to accompany all products it regulates, which include meat and poultry. Those imports are then reinspected at each port of entry before they are allowed into this country - something that doesn't happen to all FDA-regulated imports.
Under the Bioterrorism Act of 2002, anyone importing food into the United States is required to notify the FDA of the shipment before it arrives by land, air or sea. That allows the FDA to intercept contaminated products before they reach the marketplace, though agency officials acknowledge it doesn't always work that way.
"We have better control than we did a few years ago but it is largely the responsibility of the importer to make sure those products are safe," said Stephen Sundlof, the FDA's top veterinarian.
ChemNutra Inc., the Las Vegas importer of the tainted wheat gluten, said it was "particularly troubled" that its supplier did not disclose it contained melamine.
Doyle, of the University of Georgia, warned the contaminated pet food could be an unsavory taste of what's to come.
"This is not the first and will not be the last but it certainly is a wakeup call for the public to get a better appreciation for where this country is going with imports and imported foods," Doyle said.
Brackett, the FDA official, said the globalization of the food supply means the agency is going to have to be more creative and strategic in ensuring its safety. "I am not quite sure how we're going to do that yet," he said, "except to know that that's the direction that we're going to be heading."
Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllLinda mentioned standards. I work in the area of VNese trade, and standards are something that China and VN had to agree to accept in negotiations to enter the WTO. Such stardards are very foreign and not well respected, at least not until shipments get refused - Japan has now banned imports of Chinese shrimp products, for example
New laws that are gradually being adopted sometimes refer to the new standards. But the new laws overlap with the older laws. And actually the only thing that matters is enforcement. They system requires a number of signed documents, and handsome bribes must always be paid for those signatures. Document content is therefore not of paramount importance, the documents seen as something to get bribe money for officials and to get the shipments into foreign countries.
The gov't is encouraging many, many small (and uneducated) farmers to grow new kinds of export products that will bring in hard currency for the country and higher incomes for the farmers. The farmers want to grow quantity and are using chemicals and antibiotics to get higher quantities. They understand/care about only the cost/profit ratio. Local processors buy relatively small amounts from the many small farmers and they do NOT test what they buy for dangerous substances. It all gets mixed together. If enough locations in arriving shipments were tested for banned substances, they would very likely be found.
Very recently the VNese gov't warned processors that Japan will now test every shipment of VNese shrimp coming in. 'If' they find enough of the nasty they will ban VNese shrimp imports. And so exporters are openly being told to plan to redirect shimp exports to the US - because US inspection is relatively lax. The Japanese will pay more (until they ban it) but the Americans are not so picky.
We have no real assurances that imported food labeled as 'organic' is any safer. Often organic accreditation is overseen by the same agricultural interests that grows the crop. Very real conflicts of interest exist. Bribery and graft are not uncommon, and it may be reasonably suggested that the value of many non-industry inspections is nil.
Support your local farmers.
Demand that your supermarkets, grocery stores, health food stores, and co-ops buy domestic and preferably local when possible.
If we don't, our farms will go the way of our factories.
The process has already begun.
Must domestically produced food isn't inspected either. The food industry is largely "self-regulating" and reports to the FDA.
So,now that we know China poisoned our cats and dogs, what is being done? Yes, I know that not ALL of the foodstuffs coming from there is at fault. But the problem of the pet food is indicative of the extent to which global trading partners are NOT HELD ACCOUNTABLE!! They do not have adequate standards for health and safety, which is NOT to say that we do in this country either (in spite of what the government tries to tell us).
The FREE TRADE agreements pushed through mostly during the Clinton era need to be renegotiated with clear standards that include regulation of environmental risks like the pesticides we've outlawed in the US. The multi-national corporations who can't see them here just re-package with new labels and dump them in the less regulated parts of the world.
So, it doesn't matter that we have laws against their use here as long as other countries DO USE them, and they make the round trip back into consumer mouths here.
Front and center in the presidential debate should be the FREE TRADE agreements: NAFTA, CAFTA, and any others. Where's Hillary on what her husband foisted on us?
But, back to the main question, WHO IS HELD ACCOUNTABLE for murdering our pets? They know the names of the suppliers, finally. This should entail CRIMINAL PROSECUTION of those responsible, and the issue needs to be dealt with on a world scale.
###
S
2nd paragraph--sell NOT see
What do we expect from a government led by the Bush Administration?
There probably is a lobbyist for the food manufacturers association in charge of the FDA. Is there a voluntary program in the works for food companies to regulate themselves?
GLOBALIZATION IS TERRIBLE, STUPID, AND TOTALLY SUCKS for all cultures including ours
Well, well, the US has been aggressively exporting, despite protests, GMO grain products and hormone pumped meat to the rest of the world and now we find other countries are trying to put crap on our table -- how uncouth!
This is sort of an almost literal case of dog-eat-dog.
The control of food produced inside the USA is not as rosy as one would think either -- that mad cow disease is under la-la control is a public secret.
But don't worry, we will keep the illegal Mexicans from crossing the border and polluting our culture!
Globalization is not in itself a bad thing and it is inevetiable as long as we maintain a technological level of development. The problem is what is globalized and by whom. American meat is no less tainted than Chinese the products mentioned. We need international standards of labor and production and we need them enforced. Maybe an international body not beholden to the interests of any nation or multi-national should have to approve anything on the international market based on labor standards and conditions and product quality. International labor should have a big voice in this since it is we who do the producing and the consuming.
ANY republican lead federal agency is SUSPECT, and CRIMINALLY DERELICT in proving oversight over the industry its supposed to regulate.
FOX, welcome to the hen house! Now don't you touch those hens now, ya hear?! nod, wink wink
jjpeter, it isn't just the repugs. Clinton did a lot to gut the FDA and the USDA. Both parties are working for the same corporate interests.
Linda Sutton is absolutely correct:
Just in case you haven't figured it out yet, all those nasty chemicals banned in the US are still being produced by companies like Monsanto, Union Carbide, Dow Chemical etc. Why?
So they can sell this poison to the countries elsewhere from which we import so much of our produce and other food stuffs--including things that are used in the preparation of convienience foods. Think about that the next time you buy fruit of vegtables out of season.
Jaded Prole I am not so sure I agree with your theory of the inevitability of globalization. It is entirely dependent on cheap and abundant energy (translate petroleum)which even as we write is swiftly going the way of an endangered species.
Not only won't we have the petroleum to ship stuff here, there, and everywhere, we won't have the petroleum to power factory farming agribusiness with the two things it needs most: pesticides and artificiaL fertilizers.
We all need to get to know local food producers and become one ourselves. If you don't have a farmers market set up in your neighborhood (within biking or walking distance preferably)you better get together with others about starting one right now.
Why have a lawn unless you are a herbivore who eats grass? You don't know how to garden or raise animals? Good you have a brief window of opportunity to teach yourself and learn from your mistakes. Get busy everybody! Our collective survival will depend on it.
... And we got to get ourselves back to the ga-a-a-arden :-)
Jaded Prole is right
A large part of the answer to many problems is to return to locally grown, organic, foods. And if you have a small bit of land to use, upgrade the soil, start a compost pile, and plant what you can before all the seeds are gone.
"Does the United States have the wherewithal to ensure the food it imports is safe?"
No, but you can bet your ass they have the wherewithal to make sure the profits on these imports are filling their coffers.
Increased "safeguards" on food products or any other products means less profit! Less profit under any circumstances doesn't fit the psychopathic profile of a capitalist pig.
Agricultural globalization, global schmobalization!. There is no way government bureaurcratic inspections will keep us safe. Think Small. Grow some of your own food in your backyard gardens, shop in local Farmers Markets, support you small farmers in your region via "Land Trust" programs. Stop BIG AGRA. bon appetite
A year ago, the Center for Science in the Public Interest reviewed the actions of the FDA on its 100 anniversity and found them wanting. Check:
http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/press/200606271.html
One of the things they was mentioned a year ago was the FDA's failure to inspect foods.
If it weren't so serious, some of the things done by the FDA are so outrageous they would be funny. For example, the FDA doesn't want people to take growth hormones, but they are defending Monsanto's bovine growth hormone to the limits. They are trying to force dairys to not label their milk as BGH-free, claiming the "Milk is milk".
Their newest outrage is to disallow alternative medicine and label dietary supplements as "untested drugs".
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/healthfreedomusa/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=7185
We are all supposed to be good "factory-farm animals" who eat junk food that profits factory farms and food giants and then takes drugs that profit big Pharma.
Not to add misery to agony however, beware the Chocolate from Bavaria and other Germanic delights brought to our shores by multinational grocer a--i.
Chernobyl rain developed into a norwester before it subsided. Radioactive fallout fell as far west as Scotland, Sweden and England. Northern Europe, in short, took a bath in Ukrainian Isotopes.
Plan your summer sojourns to Europe with extreme care. It seems only a few remember the events of Spring 1986.
Do we need more FDA and USDA food inspectors? Sooner not later..Maybe we do need Hillary and Bill back in the White House....he would protect our cheeseburgers not drill rigs. God Save us All. jf
Not to add misery to agony however, beware the Chocolate from Bavaria and other Germanic delights brought to our shores by multinational grocers .
Chernobyl rain developed into a norwester before it subsided. Radioactive fallout fell as far west as Scotland, Sweden and England. Northern Europe, in short, took a bath in Ukrainian Isotopes.
Plan your summer sojourns to Europe with extreme care. It seems only a few remember the events of Spring 1986.
Do we need more FDA and USDA food inspectors? Sooner not later..Maybe we do need Hillary and Bill back in the White House....he would protect our cheeseburgers not drill rigs. God Save us All. jf