China Shuts 180 Food Factories

Inspectors found industrial chemicals being used in products from candy to seafood; also uncovered use of recycled or expired food.

BEIJING (AP) - China has closed 180 food factories after inspectors found industrial chemicals being used in products from candy to seafood, state media said Wednesday.
 
The closures came amid a nationwide crackdown on shoddy and dangerous products launched in December that also uncovered use of recycled or expired food, the China Daily said.
 
Formaldehyde, illegal dyes, and industrial wax were found being used to make candy, pickles, crackers and seafood, it said, citing Han Yi, an official with the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, which is responsible for food safety.
 
Han's admission was significant because the administration has said in the past that safety violations were the work of a few rogue operators, a claim which is likely part of a strategy to protect China's billions of dollars of food exports.
 
International concerns over China's food safety problems ballooned this year after high levels of toxins and industrial chemicals were found in exported products.
 
Authorities in China have pushed for more stringent controls and increased publicity of their efforts to control the problem.
 
Han said most of the offending manufacturers were small, unlicensed food plants with fewer than 10 employees, and all had been shut down. China Daily said 75 percent of China's estimated 1 million food processing plants are small and privately owned.
 
According to Han, the ongoing inspections are focusing on commonly consumed food such as meat, milk, beverages, soy sauce and cooking oil. Rural areas and the suburbs, where standards are likely less strict, are still considered key areas for inspectors, he said.
 
Meanwhile, another regulating agency, China's State Administration for Industry and Commerce, said it closed 152,000 unlicensed food manufacturers and retailers last year for making fake and low-quality products. It also banned 15,000 tons of ''unqualified food'' from entering the market because it failed to meet national standards.
 
The report, posted on the administration's Web site Tuesday, gave no other details and telephone calls to the administration were not answered.
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