Author Topic: China rapidly has become the leading exporter of seafood to the United States !  (Read 2179 times)

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Offline megimoo

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'The Chinese are sending us their junk'

SOARING IMPORTS
 In March, inspectors checking Chinese seafood arriving at U.S. ports made some unsettling discoveries: fish infected with salmonella in Baltimore and Seattle, and shrimp with banned veterinary drugs in Florida.

Meanwhile, a shipment intercepted in Los Angeles on March 19 and labeled "channel catfish" wasn't catfish at all, though records don't say what it was.

Supermarket frozen food sections routinely are filled with imported fish filets, shrimp and crab meat — which must contain country-of-origin labels on packaging.

No such disclosure is required for fish served in restaurants, so people generally can't know with certainty the country of origin for the fish or shrimp they order.

Records at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration show how surging Chinese imports are meeting the demand of seafood-loving Americans. For instance, between 2000 and 2007, imports of farm-raised tilapia from China — a staple in restaurants — soared nine-fold, to more than 240 million pounds.
snip

China rapidly has become the leading exporter of seafood to the United States, flooding supermarkets and restaurants. And while China agreed late last year to improve the safety of food exports, the inspectors' March findings were not isolated cases.

According to Food and Drug Administration inspectors turned away nearly 400 shipments of tainted seafood in a year's time from China. Only a tiny fraction of imports are inspected at all, and even fewer are tested.

snip

Seafood is considered one of the most risky imports, and those from China steadily have risen. When the FDA does turn away shipments, usually it is because the food contains veterinary drugs, among them nitrofurans, a family of antibiotics banned by the FDA because tests showed they cause cancer in animals.

More than 100 of the shipments were rejected for being filthy, decomposed or otherwise unfit for consumption, according to the records.
 The FDA and the Chinese government agreed on new procedures aimed at preventing tainted and dangerous food and drugs from reaching American shores. But skeptics question whether the new, voluntary arrangement has sufficient teeth.

Meanwhile, Chinese seafood is a prime target of legislation in Congress to revamp decades-old inspection mechanisms in hopes of protecting Americans in a globalized food system.

snip
Retired FDA official William Hubbard, formerly the FDA's associate commissioner,argue that change is urgently needed.

Hubbard, who retired in 2005, recalled inspectors reporting particularly disturbing methods of Chinese aquaculture: raising chickens in cages kept above fish-ponds — a potential source of the salmonella in seafood, he said.
snip

Hitchens sounded a common refrain in the American aquaculture industry: "Here in Illinois, we're very conscious of trying to get out a fresh product that is natural and without antibiotics."

Echoed Brenda Lyons, whose family grows prawns in Sandoval, Ill.: "We're not going to compete with China. We're not going to grow a bunch of junk. We're selling live, fresh fish. And they can't supply that from over there."

http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/washington/story/9B0E83BCDECC09DB8625743E00129671?OpenDocument
« Last Edit: May 05, 2008, 07:22:10 PM by megimoo »

Offline Bondai

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There is no reason the US should have to import food, with very few exceptions.


"It's mercy, compassion, and forgiveness I lack; not rationality".

Offline rich_t

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There is no reason the US should have to import food, with very few exceptions.

I agree in general for the most part.  But with the rate that American farms seem to be shrinking and losing out to urban sprawl, that may change in the fairly near future.

I know a lot of ground that used to be farmland when I was younger that is now malls and housing developments.
"The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of 'liberalism,' they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program, until one day America will be a socialist nation, without knowing how it happened." --Norman Thomas, 1944

Offline Lacarnut

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I do not see Chinese crawfish in the stores anymore. They were dumping them in Louisiana at very low prices and I think our government stopped them.. Anyway, their crawfish are chewy and have a tang to them. As far as i am concerned, they are not worth a cr@p at any price.   

Offline megimoo

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I do not see Chinese crawfish in the stores anymore. They were dumping them in Louisiana at very low prices and I think our government stopped them.. Anyway, their crawfish are chewy and have a tang to them. As far as i am concerned, they are not worth a cr@p at any price.   
Some of the Super_Walmart's have Tainted Chinese catfish filets and other Chino_Asian delights !

Offline DixieBelle

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I don't eat seafood.
I can see November 2 from my house!!!

Spread my work ethic, not my wealth.

Forget change, bring back common sense.
-------------------------------------------------

No, my friends, there’s only one really progressive idea. And that is the idea of legally limiting the power of the government. That one genuinely liberal, genuinely progressive idea — the Why in 1776, the How in 1787 — is what needs to be conserved. We need to conserve that fundamentally liberal idea. That is why we are conservatives. --Bill Whittle

Offline Lacarnut

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I do not see Chinese crawfish in the stores anymore. They were dumping them in Louisiana at very low prices and I think our government stopped them.. Anyway, their crawfish are chewy and have a tang to them. As far as i am concerned, they are not worth a cr@p at any price.   
Some of the Super_Walmart's have Tainted Chinese catfish filets and other Chino_Asian delights !

A number of months ago someone posted that they had gotten some bad ribs at Walleymart. I do not buy meat or seafood from them. Getting food poisoning once is enough to last me a lifetime.