Monday, September 18, 2023

Feed Mill Fined for Using GMO Corn

A feed mill in China's Guangdong Province has been fined by authorities for using unapproved genetically modified corn as raw material. Could this be a signal that Chinese officials are ready to crack down on corn imports?

The announcement was featured in news media as one of 10 "representative cases" of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs' campaign to "stabilize grain production, protect supply." Authorities say traces of imported GMO corn were found in the company's processing equipment in a sample inspection for GMOs. The feed company had not obtained a license to process agricultural GMOs. The batch of illegally processed corn totaled 31.02 metric tons. The corn had already been processed, but final products had not been sold, according to the description of the case. The company was fined 101,000 yuan (less than $14,000) and products were destroyed.

Chinese agricultural authorities announce "representative cases" in GMO crackdowns about once a year, but it is unusual--perhaps unprecedented--to feature illegal use of GMO grain by a processor.

For example, early this year an announcement of representative cases of GMO violations from 2022 featured unapproved trials of GMO corn by two seed companies in a Hainan; GMO corn trials in Henan Province conducted by DBN Ag Technology Co. without obtaining a license from the county; traces of GMO corn were discovered in plots of summer corn trialed by Beijing Wannong Pioneer in Tianjin; and two shops were caught selling unlabeled GMO soybeans in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province.

The discovery of GMO corn in the Guangdong feed mill announced this week was actually made a year ago, on September 9, 2022. Why did it take a year to announce it? None of the other 9 "representative cases" were mentioned. Is this a signal from authorities that corn imports need to be cut back?

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Chinese food safety news media fog: "borax pork" example

"'Borax pork' appears in the market again, serious investigation!" was the headline of a Guangzhou Daily article posted on many Chinese web sites earlier this month--including official Xinhua News. The article warned consumers that inspectors found that market vendors used borax to keep their pork moist and fresh-looking in a food market in south China. This appears to be a straightforward warning to consumers. But picking apart this "news" shows how authorities carefully control reporting of problems to manage public opinion and deflect blame for problems.

According to the "borax pork" warning, borax was discovered during a "surprise inspection" of two food market vendors selling meatballs and pork in Panyu--a manufacturing hub and satellite city of Guangzhou in south China. Inspectors seized a box of borax used by a vendor to clean pig intestines, and chemical testing detected borax in some samples of meat. The inspection was carried out jointly by market supervision officials and police. Panyu police are prosecuting those responsible and local authorities are cracking down on the use of additives and borax, the article said. 

[According to WebMD borax is a white powdery substance that combines boron, sodium and oxygen. It is commonly used as a household cleanser, a laundry detergent additive, and other uses. If ingested in large doses it can cause kidney problems. Borax is banned for use in food in both the U.S. and China.]
Staged photo of inspectors checking for borax-adulterated pork products in Panyu, China.

Why was the discovery of 2 samples of tainted meat in a single market in southern China considered to be important enough to circulate all over the Chinese internet? Was it, in fact, news?

Chinese propagandists appear to be salting news media with reports of "borax pork" to warn consumers of a widespread and chronic problem. They report what appear to be small, isolated incidents in southern factory towns to hide the scope of the problem. The articles sow suspicion of small vendors to drive food business to supermarket chains which authorities believe they can control more easily.

In August 2023, Hong Kong news media reported that borax-contaminated pork was discovered in Zhuhai, another city in Guangdong Province. Again, borax was discovered on pork from 3 vendors who had been turned over to police.

In June 2023, Shanghai publication The Paper had posted a lengthy article, "Borax pork appearing on the market--what is it?" reporting the story of retired "Uncle Zhao" who became suspicious of a pork vendor after reading an article online about borax-contaminated pork. The article noted that Chinese Central TV had once reported that borax was detected in pork sold by 3 vendors in Nanning City of Guangxi Province (2015 report preserved by bannedbook.org) and went on to explain why vendors treat their pork with borax, its dangers and how to watch out for it. Like the recent Guangzhou Daily article, The Paper article cited an example from Panyu, but it was a Panyu Daily article from 2015--8 years ago. 

Similar but different facts were reported in another 2015 Guangzhou Daily article which again gave 3 examples of pork vendors prosecuted for adding borax to pork. These vendors sold pork in Dongguan, another industrial satellite city of Guangzhou, and each was identified as coming from small cities and towns elsewhere in Guangdong Province.
Vendor accused of adulterating pork with borax in court, 2011

China's Baidu has an article on "borax pork" that posts a number of clips from news media outlets warning about "borax pork."

Another article circulated on Chinese web sites in June featured warnings from physicians that ingesting even one gram of borax used on pork could be toxic. 

In June 2023 inspectors in Taiwan's New Taipei City discovered 2 food samples adulterated with borax. They had discovered 1 adulterated sample in 2018.

In December 2022, a lengthy article issued by a Jiangsu Province news outlet warned consumers about the borax pork problem.

In 2020, Hong Kong media reported announcements that borax pork adulteration was discovered in Shanxi and Fujian Provinces.

Guangdong Province issued a warning about borax in pork as early as 2011, demonstrating that the problem has been around more than two decades. 

What we can discern from picking through these reports is that use of borax to clean up pork is pervasive in China and has been for 2 decades or more. Authorities want to warn consumers about the problem, but news media have been instructed to only report 2 or 3 isolated cases in far-away industrial towns to cover up the pervasiveness of the problem. The articles blame evil or ignorant vendors to deflect blame from government officials. No cases have been reported in retail chain food outlets which are favored by Chinese leaders.

A corollary is that monitoring news media reports in China is not an accurate means of monitoring what's actually going on. News media report only what the regime wants the public to know. These reports are reposted on social media, so monitoring social media results in the same outcome. Borax adulteration of meat occurs in China all the time, but news media handlers choose when to intermittently salt the media with reports to boost crackdown campaigns. 

A result of news media control is a fragmentation of the public into an ill-informed segment who accept the reports and another segment who distrust news media because they have discovered the manipulation. This leads to dysfunction and is not unique to China. The threat is present anywhere news media are controlled by an elite minority.

Saturday, September 9, 2023

Disaster Spending Suggests Flood/Drought Damage

The billions of RMB paid out to mitigate flooding and drought in China--including directives to replant crops in September within a month or two of harvest--suggest substantial damage to grain crops. Yet, Chinese authorities are sure to announce another huge harvest this year. 

Funding of 732 million RMB was announced September 1, 2023 by the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs for drought mitigation in Gansu and Shaanxi Province; recovery from typhoon damage to crops in Jilin and Heilongjiang Province; and control of rice pests and diseases in Jiangxi and Hunan Provinces. 

On August 25, the Gansu Provincial finance and agricultural departments issued 50 million RMB for emergency drought relief that paid for seeds, fertilizer, agricultural plastics and equipment to replant crops, and water engineering in the province.

On August 30, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs held its videoconference to discuss use of agricultural machinery for disaster prevention and recovery. The annual "Three Autumn" mechanization work calls upon local officials to organize equipment and teams to harvest fall crops, plant over-wintering wheat and rapeseed crops, and to plow, level, drain fields and dig ditches. Officials in flood-impacted areas were ordered to use earth-moving equipment to rehabilitate fields as soon as floodwaters recede. Local authorities are expected to fund this initiative on their own. The program sets targets for the number of machines and strives to increase the mechanization rate. 

On July 31, The Ministries of Finance and Agriculture issued 432 million RMB to support saving or replanting of crops impacted by drought and floods in 8 provinces. 

On June 3, the Ministries of Finance and Agriculture announced emergency funds of 200 million RMB to expedite harvesting and drying of wheat in Henan Province after severe flooding waterlogged the crop.

In April, central authorities issued 1.6 billion RMB for the annual "one spray, three preventions" to treat the winter wheat crop with a combination of fungicides, insecticides, plant growth regulators, and fertilizers.

Also in April, authorities issued 10 billion RMB for a "one-time subsidy to grain farmers" to compensate farmers for rising input costs at spring planting time. Any farmer, cooperative, or enterprise that actually plants grain is eligible to receive this subsidy. 

Similar disaster funds were issued in 2022. The "one-time" subsidy is actually a "three-time" subsidy (and counting) since "one-time" subsidies were also given in 2021 (40 billion RMB) and 2022 (20 billion RMB). Each province pays this subsidy in different amounts based on the area of crops planted. The "one spray, three preventions" for spring wheat spraying has been paid routinely for many years. In August 2022 300 million RMB was distributed for recovery and replanting of crops impacted by drought, flooding and typhoons in 13 provinces. In June 2022, 673 million RMB was issued for control of rice and corn pests and locusts in 25 provinces. In 2022--during severe covid lockdowns--the "three Autumn" mechanization emphasized harvesting and planting of crops where farmers were unable to return to their hometowns and harvesting and drying crops from flooded fields.