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Food
safety workers taking test samples at a food market in Beijings
Haidian District.
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Organic
vegetables are the latest food trend.
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Beijings
food tracking system is one of many measures the city has
taken to improve food safety in the local market.
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ZHANG Xin and her mother often disagree on where to do the family
food shopping. Just a couple of cucumbers cost five or six
yuan in the supermarket. Theyre much cheaper at the produce
market, grumbles the matriarch. Zhang Xin argues that supermarket
vegetables are organic free from pesticides, antibiotics
and other chemicals and cultivated and marketed according
to strict standards. She insists that superior quality never comes
cheap, and that its worth spending the extra money to protect
the familys health.
People of Zhangs mothers generation have had scant
dealings with organic food, even though it appeared in China back
in the 1990s. Organic comestibles are produced by 1,155 specifically
certified enterprises in China, and are available on the Chinese
market in 100 varieties, in the form of grain, vegetables and
cooking oil. The area of land in China designated for growing
organic crops is now 300,000 hectares.
Zhangs mother may be unwilling to change the thrifty habits
of a lifetime, but nevertheless takes pains to prepare quality
victuals for her family. She shops at the produce market, where
farmers hawk wares that they either grow themselves or purchase
from wholesalers. The pork she buys there bears the purple stamp
of quarantine approval. Chinas licensed slaughterhouses
deal only in hogs that have the requisite documentation. It comprises
the local authority quarantine certificate confirming no breakouts
of disease have occurred in the area of origin; a transportation
vehicle hygiene certificate; and confirmation of the vaccination
earmark on each hog. Pork emanating from slaughterhouses must
pass 18 tests before receiving both the purple stamp of approval
from the animal quarantine department of the local agricultural
and forestry administration and the quality guarantee stamp from
the slaughterhouse before it enters the market.
Zhang Xin never bothers to look for the purple stain on pork
because she always shops in supermarkets, where a quality control
system is automatically in place.
A notice in the fish section of the French-invested Carrefour
supermarket reads: The quality of our fish is guaranteed
by its direct purchase from the aquatic farm. Next to it
is a flow chart giving details of the time the goods are picked
up and brought to the store: The truck arrives at the aquatic
farm at 4:00 am, leaves at 4:30 am and arrives at the store at
6:00 am. The store opens at 8:30 am. A notice in the pork
section declares: Our pork is supplied by a farm belonging
to the Beijing Resource Group of Daxing District of Beijing, whose
entire process of pig rearing to pork product processing is regularly
supervised by independent organizations. The pork it produces
has passed the test administered by the Beijing Office of Safety
Production of Edible Produce.
These confirmations are reassuring at a time when the Chinese
people are increasingly concerned about food safety, in view of
the crooked dealings that frequently occur as regards product
quality and weight. It is widely acknowledged that the standardized
managerial and operational systems administered by the bigger
retailers ensure that their foodstuffs are of the highest quality.
The government, however, takes ultimate responsibility for food
safety. Back in December 2003, the Beijing municipal government
established an office whose specific function is to oversee, coordinate
and investigate food safety issues. Its other duties include amassing
food safety information for release to the media, and analyzing,
assessing and preventing food safety risks.
In addition to stepping up controls on locally produced food,
Beijing has also intensified scrutiny of that brought in from
outside the capital. Vegetable wholesale centers are required
to conduct tests on the bulk of incoming produce, and to reject
and report to the relevant agricultural, industrial and commercial
authorities any that fall short of the expected standard. Vegetables
from a particular source that fail three successive spot-checks
within six months are banned from the Beijing market for that
amount of time.
Identity-Tagged Food
As food safety is crucial to the success of the 2008 Olympic
Games, Beijing currently conducts stringent quality control over
45 varieties of foodstuffs in its markets.
On August 8, 2007 one full year ahead of the event
Beijing announced the inauguration of a tracking system on three
categories of comestibles pre-packaged food, vegetables/fruits
and livestock/fowl products. Packages bear a special label giving
customer access to information on relevant food sources via the
Internet, touch screens in stores, and telephone.
The system in place regarding fruits, vegetables, beef and aquatic
products, currently operating on a trial basis, is scheduled to
extend full-scale over the whole nation. The system will
continue to serve Beijing residents after the 2008 Games. There
will be records of every egg and fish distributed through regular
channels, confirms Tang Yunhua, section chief of the Beijing
Food Safety Office.
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