Cape Times

Tainted-meat scandal hits Brazil’s protein exports

- Fabiana Batista, Gerson Freitas Jr and Rachel Chang

SOME of the world’s biggest protein buyers are slapping limits on supplies from Brazil as producers in the country become embroiled in a tainted meat scandal.

China, the largest importer of Brazilian chicken and beef, has temporaril­y suspended shipments from the South American country, while the EU and Chile have also restricted purchases.

Singapore authoritie­s said the country was monitoring meat shipments from Brazil, as South Korea lifted its shortlived ban on chicken imports from Brazilian meat giant BRF.

The move to protect meat supplies comes after Brazilian federal authoritie­s announced on March 17 that they were investigat­ing evidence that local producers bribed government officials to approve the sale of spoiled meat.

The country’s prosecutor­s alleged some sausages and cold cuts contained animal parts such as pigs’ heads, that some meat products were adulterate­d with cardboard, and that, in some cases, acid was used to mask the smell of tainted meat.

Global importers were quick to take action in the wake of the scandal.

China said it would not accept Brazilian meat shipments until the South American nation provided further clarificat­ion on the probe, while Chile temporaril­y banned all meat imports from Brazil.

China and Hong Kong were the largest importers of Brazilian meat, accounting for a combined 35percent of the beef and 17 percent of the chicken shipped by the South American nation, according to industry data.

China edged past Brazil last year as the second-largest consumer of beef and veal, with both nations accounting for about 13 percent of global demand.

McDonald’s China, the country’s second-largest fast-food chain operator with 2 400 outlets, did not import meat from the suppliers named in the probe, according to a spokeswoma­n. The company said it used mostly domestic and Australian meat at its restaurant­s in China.

South Korea lifted a temporary suspension on chicken imports from BRF yesterday after officials confirmed with Brazil that imports from BRF were from plants that were not contaminat­ed, according to the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Food and Rural Affairs.

BRF was the only supplier among the 21 plants named in the probe that ships to the Asian nation, according to the ministry.

South Korea said it had never purchased rotten chicken and would maintain strengthen­ed inspection­s on imports from Brazil.

Brazilian authoritie­s confirmed that companies implicated in the probe had been suspended from exporting to the EU, European Commission spokesman Enrico Brivio said. The EU had asked Brazil to stop the companies from shipping to the region.

The bloc had suspended imports from four Brazil plants, including one owned by BRF, Ricardo Santin, a director at the Brazilian Associatio­n of Animal Proteins told journalist­s in Sao Paulo.

The EU is the second-biggest destinatio­n for beef and the third for chicken, accounting for less than 10 percent of total shipments.

“We have asked our member states to be vigilant,” Brivio told reporters in Brussels. “The commission remains in constant contact with the Brazilian authoritie­s and is following this matter very closely.”

Food giants JBS and BRF have taken out full-page newspaper advertisem­ents and paid for prime-time television spots to reassure consumers that their meat is safe to eat after finding themselves at the centre of Brazil’s latest corruption probe.

The scandal might impede Brazil’s plans to open new markets, including Mexico and South Korea, for beef after the US allowed imports of fresh meat last year, Antonio Carmadelli, the head of the Brazil meat exporters associatio­n Abiec, told journalist­s in Sao Paulo.

The US Meat Export Federation said it was too early to speculate on the potential impact on the global meat trade, because “there really are not enough facts available about the investigat­ion, or about how Brazil’s trading partners will respond”, the group said in an emailed response to questions from Bloomberg.

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