Chinese market regulators have launched crackdowns on adulteration and fraud in cooking oil and meat industries. Chinese authorities have claimed to have solved these food safety and fraud problems on multiple occasions over the past 30 years.
Fraud and adulteration in China's cooking oil industry will be the focus of a crackdown announced by the State Administration of Market Supervision and Regulation that began April 12 and will continue through December 2025. The rectification will address prominent problems and illegal business behavior that threatens the quality and safety of edible oils, including:
- Adulteration and counterfeiting, including the sale of cheap oils as premium oils and passing off expired oils as new product.
- Excessive use of additives such as flavorings, fragrances, and pigments during the production and processing of vegetable oils.
- False labeling: unlabeled oils or products that inaccurately declare proportions of blended oils, failure to clearly label genetically modified vegetable oils, and false labeling of vegetable oil extraction processes.
- Failure to fulfill delivery of bulk vegetable oil or failure to carry out responsibilities and obligations in delivery, unloading and loading of oils.
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This illustration instructs consumers how to distinguish pure sesame oil from sesame oil mixed with cheap rapeseed or cottonseed oil. |
- diluting premium oils with cheap oils
- adding flavors, spices and pigments to low-end oils to make "fake sesame oil" or "fake peanut oil."
- using "gutter oil" to process vegetable oil
- passing off expired oils as new vegetable oil
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Rats allegedly to be used to make fake lamb. |
- addition of non-food materials, pesticide residues exceeding tolerances (on meat), and excessive use of food additives.
- processing, storing, or selling meat from animals that died of disease, toxins or unknown causes.
- deceiving consumers by passing off chicken and duck as beef and mutton, passing off other livestock and poultry blood products as duck blood, and using "trough meat" without removing diseased lymph nodes and diseased tissues.
- failure to obtain inspection certificates
- selling cooked food, braised food and other meat products from unknown origins
- processing or selling uninspected meat, meat from unknown origin, or smuggled frozen meat t
- production and sale of fake beef, mutton, donkey and other meat products
- illegal use of nitrites and food additives beyond prescribed limits
- false advertising of meat products on e-commerce or for direct sale.
- use of beta agonists, banned medications and other illegal additives and compounds.
- failure of farms to safely dispose of diseased animals; sale of meat from dead animals
- failure of slaughter facilities to check the registration system, acceptance of uninspected animals, pumping water or drugs into animals at slaughter
- unlicensed slaughter of hogs, cattle and sheep
- purchasing meat from animals that died of disease, toxins or unknown causes
- hotpot, barbecue and donkey restaurants purchasing meat from unknown origin or lacking inspection
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