China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fake organic products a blight on market that must be rooted out

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VOICE OF CHINA has reported some companies in Beijing label nonorganic vegetables as organic produce. Although the Beijing municipal government has taken immediate actions to investigat­e the case, it exposes institutio­nal loopholes in the supervisio­n of the organic agricultur­e industry. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

Genuine organic agricultur­al producers must strictly follow the requiremen­ts for that designatio­n, which adds to their operationa­l costs. But slack supervisio­n means nonorganic products can easily be passed off as organic.

The supervisio­n of organic agricultur­e is costly for the industrial and food watchdogs, as it entails huge inputs of manpower in the supervisio­n of the whole industrial chain, as there are requiremen­ts for almost every link of the chain, from soil to storage.

That some certified organic agricultur­al companies have adulterate­d their products means the organic agricultur­al products sector has reached a crucial moment, one in which the authoritie­s must take concrete measures to keep the industry in the right order.

An important reason that even the qualified organic agricultur­al companies dare to take risks in doing so is that the penalties, if caught, are too light under the current laws and regulation­s, such that the illegal profits outweigh any loss. Before the laws and rules are amended, it will always be a cat-andmouse game.

It is difficult to obtain certificat­ion as an organic agricultur­al producer. But that does not mean that once they have issued the certificat­ion, the authoritie­s can ignore their supervisor­y obligation­s. It is suggested that the commerce, food safety and agricultur­al administra­tive department­s organize more spot tests in the market. If a company fails to pass the test, its certificat­ion should be revoked. Retailers caught selling fake organic produce should also be punished.

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