China Daily

Testing times ahead for foreign fast-food chains

Meat scandal exposes glaring loopholes in quality control and supervisio­n, reports Wang Zhuoqiong.

- Contact the writer at wangzhuoqi­ong@chinadaily.com.cn

Ameat supplier’s practice of selling expired chicken and beef to top fastfood chains in China has highlighte­d loopholes in ensuring quality and safety in the food supply chain in the country, pushing companies to be more proactive in auditing and testing, experts said.

The Shanghai Food and Drug Administra­tion confirmed on Tuesday that Shanghai Husi Food Co Ltd was in violation of the law, after five batches (5,108 boxes) of their chicken, beef and pork were discovered to have problems.

The meat supplier, wholly owned by Chicago-based food company OSI Group LLC, sells meat to nine fastfood chains, including McDonald’s Corp and KFC parent Yum Brands Inc, coffee chain Starbucks Corp and Burger King World wide Inc.

The involved brands have halted using products from Husi. McDonald’s and Yum said they will resume purchases when they can ensure the food complies with laws and standards.

In an e-mail reply, McDonald’s said it has stringent standards and procedures for supplier management. The company said it appeared that Husi had hidden its alleged malpractic­es from McDonald’s.

“We want to find out the truth and we are reviewing this matter with the utmost care, attention and urgency,” the company said.

The scandal came as multinatio­nal food producers and retailers have expanded their outlets and factories aggressive­ly in China, one of their most important markets.

Yum, the parent company for KFC and Pizza Hut, has opened 6,387 outlets in China sofar, and it had a market share of about 5 percent in 2013.

McDonald’s has 2,000 outlets, which accounted for 2.6 percent of the fast-food market last year. About half of Yum’s revenue and 35 percent of its operating profits came from the Chinese market last year.

But their rapid expansion was not accompanie­d by a similar improvemen­t in managerial capacity and training, resulting in continued food safety scandals, said Zhao Ping, deputy director of the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, which is under the Ministry of Commerce.

Fast-food chains, which have developed quickly in China in recent years, many through franchisin­g,

have been weak in implementi­ng the industry standards and ethical principles that they follow in developed markets, she said.

“Multinatio­nals should require their operations in China to follow the same standards in terms of food safety as in developed markets,” Zhao said. “It is an excuse for food producers to lower their standards only because local regulation­s are loose and food safety and security awareness are weaker.”

Companies should invest in internal training and set up appraisal systems that involve food safety issues, she said.

Zhao said fast-food restaurant­s are also responsibl­e for unsafe food purchased at their outlets, because they should have supply chain controls at their logistics centers that deal with this issue before products are shipped to the stores. Even when products are labeled as qualified, fast-food chains should send samples for third-party testing.

The latest incident is “a wake-up call for Chinese consumers, who have long believed that foreign fast-food brands follow higher standards than domestic ones”, Zhao said.

These fast-food brands should be prepared to lose a number of loyal customers, she said.

The incident is not a simple case of negligence by an individual company but an exposure of the systemic risk in the food supply chain, which damages consumer trust and brand loyalty, she said.

Ben Cavender, an analyst at Shanghai-based China Market Research, said the reason why it appears that multinatio­nal food companies are involved in more misconduct in China than in other markets because most of the markets are not as big or fast-growing as the market in China.

In many ways, suppliers in China are still “profession­alizing” their operations and do not always hold the same standards that apply in Western Europe and the United States, he said.

Because of all these issues, it is difficult for foreign-invested suppliers to maintain quality and offer consumers safe products the way they should, even though the supplier situation has improved a lot, he said.

Hu Min, leader of the profession­al team of the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing, said that food safety testing standards and frequency should be improved at all stages of the logistics and supply chains.

In recent years, many internatio­nal retailers have learned a lesson and put more resources into food testing to prevent food safety scandals.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc was in the spotlight early this year after a supplier’s donkey meat was found to contain fox meat. It also came under fire for selling expired duck meat in 2011.

Walmart China said the company will increase its investment in food safety to more than 300 million yuan ($48.6 million) between 2013 and 2015.

It will increase DNA testing on meat products and spend more on facility audits and inspection­s of primary producers. The number of facility audits and inspection­s of primary producers was up 50 percent in 2013 compared with a year earlier, it said.

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