TGD: #Milk Scare Hits Dairy Leader New Zealand

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WELLINGTON—A toxic substance has been found in New Zealand milk, in a potential blow to the nation’s 1.1 billion New Zealand dollar (US$924 million) dairy industry.The country’s two biggest fertilizer companies, Ravensdown Ltd. and Ballance Agri-Nutrients Ltd., have suspended sales of dicyandiamide, or DCD, after low levels were found in dairy products. Farmers apply DCD to pastures to prevent nitrate, a fertilizer byproduct that can also cause health problems, from getting into rivers and lakes.
Though there are no international standards for the acceptable level of DCD in food products, in high doses the substance is toxic to humans.
Government officials Thursday expressed concern about the potential damage to the image of an industry that accounts for nearly a third of the nation’s exports.
«New Zealand’s reputation is based on the high quality of food we produce,» said Carol Barnao, deputy director of general standards at New Zealand’s primary industries ministry, which is responsible for exports and protecting the nation from biological risks. A government study of DCD use is now under way.
The New Zealand Grocery Retailer Association and Progressive Enterprises Ltd., which operates the Countdown supermarket chain, did not return requests for comment. Grocery distributor Foodstuffs Auckland Ltd. could not be reached for comment.
In 2008, Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd., one of New Zealand’s largest companies, was ensnared in a scandal involving a milk supplier in China. At least six children died and 300,000 became sick from milk containing dangerous levels of melamine, an industrial chemical that mimics the properties of protein, allowing producers to water down milk without apparently diluting its nutritional value.
Fonterra owned a large stake in one of the companies at the center of the scandal, the now-defunct Sanlu Group, but has flourished in China since Sanlu’s closing.
Fonterra is the world’s biggest exporter of dairy products, and the latest discovery of a chemical in milk products risked becoming a trade issue, the company’s managing director of public affairs, Todd Muller, said Thursday. He called suspending the use of DCD the «responsible approach.»
 
Source: Wall Street Journal

Mirá También

Así lo expresó Domingo Possetto, secretario de la seccional Rafaela, quien además, afirmó que a los productores «habitualmente los ignoran los gobiernos». Además, reconoció la labor de los empresarios de las firmas locales y aseguró que están «esperanzados» con la negociación entre SanCor y Adecoagro.

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