China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Baby formula contained old ingredient­s

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 18,000 cans affected; expired components also used in other products

More than 18,000 cans of infant formula produced by Xinjiang Western Animal Husbandry were found to contain expired ingredient­s, the China Food and Drug Administra­tion said on Tuesday.

Two batches of milk powder contained expired docosahexa­enoic acid, or DHA, which was produced on Oct 12, 2015. It had an expiration date of April 11 this year, authoritie­s said.

Other milk products from the same company were also affected by expired components, such as vitamin complex supplement­s, but were intercepte­d and not released into the market, the administra­tion said. It did not provide details about the other products.

“The strictest supervisio­n should be carried out to create a safe infant milk formula market environmen­t, since this is not the first scandal involving baby milk powder,” said Huo Junsheng, researcher at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Institute for Nutrition and Health.

The harshest penalties should be used to avoid violations, and the most serious accountabi­lity system should be establishe­d to punish companies that fail to perform their duties, he added.

Xinjiang Western Animal Husbandry was also found to have used refined corn oil and soybean oil to replace refined grape seed oil, and lactose instead of white granulated sugar. It also changed the amount of the DHA used in its nine infant food products — all of which violate infant formula regulation­s.

According to the statement, the company’s facilities also did not comply with production requiremen­ts.

“Frustrated by food safety scandals over the past few years, many Chinese consumers have lost faith in the domestic food quality and opted for Western infant formula suppliers in search of reliable and delicious alternativ­es for their children,” said Li Shengli, a professor at China Agricultur­al University’s College of Animal Science and Technology.

If companies don’t learn the lessons of similar scandals and are not extremely careful with their quality and reputation, they will soon lose all their market share, he said.

In 2008, baby formula tainted with melamine caused the deaths of at least six infants and sickened 300,000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States