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germany tries to head off ban on organic foods
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german officials are hoping to avert a full european union ban on german organic foodstuffs that may be contaminated with a cancer-causing chemical after belgium passed emergency laws to do just that. german regional agriculture officials held an emergency meeting in berlin to review the scare over chicken feed tainted with the potentially carcinogenic herbicide, nitrofen, which is banned throughout the european union. after the meeting, deputy farm minister alexander mueller said new information suggested that contrary to earlier fears, there appeared to be only one source of tainted grain and said germany had the situation under control. "i assume that this means that the grounds for the commission to act fall away," he told a news conference, adding that germany had informed officials in brussels about the latest state of play in the affair. mueller said the european commission, the bloc's executive wing, had said it was considering a ban on affected products due to concerns about a possible second source of nitrofen. mueller said there was now no reason to think there was a second source. hundreds of thousands of chickens on german organic farms are being slaughtered after it was confirmed they ate feed that was contaminated with nitrofen, apparently in an east german grain store that once housed pesticides. contaminated meat and eggs have probably already been eaten by consumers, german officials have said. a commission spokeswoman in brussels said that following information from berlin last week that was "unclear and at times contradictory" , the european union executive would examine the nitrofen issue today. "no decision has been taken yet. we are expecting more information from germany and we will look at this today," beate gminder, a spokeswoman for eu health and consumer protection commissioner david byrne, told reuters. a decision to ban the export of affected products could be taken at any time by byrne under emergency powers. although gminder said in such cases it was better to act "sooner rather than later" , this would not necessarily happen today. belgian health minister magda aelvoet said berlin had not yet provided enough information about the scare. in the meantime, she said she had no option but to demand assurances that imports of foodstuffs were free of the chemical. "the only thing i can do is to make sure the large range of german foodstuffs cannot get into the country unless they are accompanied by proof they are free of nitrofens," she told belgian television yesterday. the belgian legislation, published on the government website, said that from today, german cereals for food and animal feed, as well as food products of animal origin, would have to carry an official guarantee they had been tested and were nitrofen free. belgium said last week it would test german imports itself but has now shifted the burden onto the germans. belgium is particularly sensitive to food scares following a dioxin crisis in 1999, when the cancer-causing chemical found its way from animal feed into the food chain. exports were banned and products were recalled from shops around the world. aelvoet said other governments were acting over nitrofen. "we are not alone, the netherlands, denmark and france are, in their own way, taking measures and now it seems the european commission itself is considering measures." until the news of the contamination broke late last month, organic farming had been promoted by the german government - in which ecologist greens are the junior partners - and favoured by consumers, worried by past food scares over mad cow and foot and mouth diseases centered on more industrialised farming. officials have tracked the source of contaminated chicken feed to a grain store in malchin, which in the days of communist east germany was used to hold pesticides and weedkiller, residues of which had tainted wheat stored there. some 93 organic farms producing chickens, eggs and other poultry have been closed. german officials said nitrofen is only a serious danger to health when consumed over long periods.
Source :Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch
Date :
10
June
2002
Category :
Rest
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the notion of going green, buying organic, and sourcing free trade products is gathering momentum in australia and around the world, but research released in australia suggests the added expense remains a significant deterrent. business information analysts ibisworld decided to test the theory that sustainable grocery shopping was too expensive, revealing that, while the ‘organic’ food shopping basket was 70% more expensive, there are a host of cost-effective ‘green’ options.
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farm commodity prices have fallen from their record peaks of two years ago but are unlikely to drop back to their average levels of the past decade, according to the annual joint report from the oecd and the un food and agriculture organization (fao). the oecd-fao agricultural outlook 2010-19 sees average wheat and coarse grain prices over the next 10 years between 15-40 percent higher in real terms (adjusted for inflation) than their average levels during the 1997-2006 period.
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food manufacturers, in creating quality products, must be mindful of the potential choking hazards associated with their products, says intertek. the global food quality and safety analysts said that a training seminar they are hosting at their us facility in october provides in depth analysis and understanding of crucial food safety issues related to choking and choking prevention.
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the european parliament will today debate whether measures should be introduced to ensure retailers do not take advantage of the continuing rise in food prices. the group of the european people's party (christian democrats) and european democrats in the european parliament (epp-ed) have called for the debate in order to protect farmers and consumers from feeling the brunt of the rapid increase in raw materials for food and animal feed.
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extremely tight world wheat supplies led to panic buying of the commodity on world markets yesterday, driving up prices to record heights and stoking fears of inflation in food prices. wheat was fetching the unprecedented price of $7.54 a bushel yesterday, according to the chicago board of trade, as canada warned of a 20 per cent smaller harvest and import-reliant japan and taiwan moved fast to shore up stocks.
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it may be a lucrative time for farmers, but the continuing boom in grain and meat prices will put the squeeze on plant managers to find ways to cut costs out of their supply chains. grain prices in particular have surged over the past year with us wheat export prices up by 30 per cent and maize by about 67 per cent, according to the latest commodity forecast report by the european commission.
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a deadly outbreak of avian flu in turkey is spreading westward, with health officials confirming that a further three human cases have been found in the capital ankara on sunday, along with infected domestic fowl. with a total of 21 people from the istanbul and ankara area currently in hospital and three dead in a village to the east consumer fears over bird flu virus and the safety of europe's poultry flock has intensified.
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eurofins scientific has launched what it calls the first test available for determining whether food has been infected with the avian flu virus. the company says it is offering the testing service due to a demand from some food industry customers. the test detects the presence of the bird flu virus strain h5n1, known as avian influenza. "although it fully agrees with the european food safety authority (efsa) statement from its press release on 26th october 2005 where it says that 'whilst it is unlikely that h5n1 could be passed onto humans by raw meat or eggs, cooking food properly would inactivate the virus and eliminate this potential risk', some customers still demand testing of certain raw products to reduce the risk of consumers and employees to almost zero," eurofins stated yesterday.
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Coca.Cola
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PEPSI
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Mcdonald
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Nestle
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Mars
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Baskin & Robins
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Nutrika
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Mumika
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Chika
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