FOOD SAFETY: WHAT'S IN YOUR GROCERY CART 
Globe Life 
'Made in Canada' - via China; Trying to avoid contaminated imports? Don't rely 
on food labels, Rebecca Dube writes. A host of unsourced ingredients may lie in 
what's being sold under homemade banners 
6 July 2007 
The Globe and Mail <javascript:void(0)>  
Florence Wood threw out all of her dog's made-in-China biscuits during this 
spring's melamine scare. 
Last week, after hearing warnings about unsafe fish and tainted toothpaste 
imported from China, she decided to purge her own pantry. 
Goodbye, tinned salmon. So long, mandarin oranges. Farewell, frozen fish. 
"Anything at all that comes from China that's edible we are not going to eat 
now," said Ms. Wood, a retired secretary in Lac-des-Îles, Que. She's even 
nervous about putting leftovers in made-in-China plastic containers. 
She's not alone. More consumers are taking a hard look at "Made in China" 
labels after a string of recalls and publicity over deplorable safety standards 
in China. But it's nearly impossible to get out of the supermarket without food 
from China in your cart. 
The good news is that avoiding products labelled "Made in China" won't crimp 
your grocery list, unless you really like frozen seafood - including shrimp, 
pollock, sole, haddock and salmon. 
The bad news is that food labels don't tell the whole story. A host of Chinese 
imports are hiding behind "Made in Canada" labels, from the freeze-dried 
strawberries in your cereal to the wheat gluten in your hamburger buns. 
"Made in Canada" simply means that 51 per cent of the production cost was 
incurred in Canada; the ingredients could come from anywhere, and increasingly 
they come from China. For example, manufacturers can import apple juice 
concentrate from China - for about one-fifth the cost of Canadian concentrate - 
add water to it in Canada, and mark it "Made in Canada." 
"We eat food from China every day, we just don't know about it," says Dr. Keith 
Warriner, an assistant professor of food science at the University of Guelph. 
Canadians ate $430-million worth of food from China last year, and as China's 
economic power grows so does its reach into our supermarkets, our kitchens - 
even our churches. Canada imported $9.5-million worth of communion wafers from 
China last year, along with $113-million worth of frozen fish fillets and 
$28-million worth of apple juice. 
"A Canadian producer can source its supplies for cents [in China] rather than 
for dollars here," Dr. Warriner explains. 
But North American consumers have recently become aware that inexpensive 
Chinese imports sometimes bear a hidden cost. 
This spring, thousands of dogs and cats fell ill or died after eating pet food 
containing wheat gluten from China that was contaminated with melamine. 
Since then, consumers have been warned about seafood, including shrimp and 
catfish, that doesn't meet safety standards; contaminated toothpaste and 
juices, and "Veggie Booty" snack food tainted by salmonella - all from China. 
Meanwhile, Chinese officials have insisted their exported food is safe. 
But this week, Beijing acknowledged that one-fifth of the goods made and sold 
in China are substandard, and the former head of China's food and drug 
administration, Zheng Xiaoyu, was recently sentenced to death for accepting 
bribes. 
Canadian officials stand by their policy of testing Chinese food imports on a 
case-by-case basis when concerns are raised about specific products. 
Dr. Warriner believes greater scrutiny of imports from China will ultimately 
come not from governments, but from food companies with valuable brand 
reputations at stake. 
"If we started labelling all the individual ingredients, the label would be a 
book," he says. 
Dr. Warriner says that he avoids some made-in-China products, such as frozen 
fish, but that there's "no cause for alarm" about the myriad ingredients from 
China that fill our bellies daily. 
Not everyone is so sanguine. 
Canada's growing gluttony for Chinese imports is a disaster waiting to happen, 
says Bruce Cran, president of the Consumers Association of Canada. Other than 
writing to their MPs or buying only locally grown food, Mr. Cran says, there's 
not much Canadian consumers can do about it. 
"Consumers are handicapped because we don't have the information we need on the 
labels," says Mr. Cran, whose family has sworn off all apple juice, regardless 
of its country-of-origin label, because so much of it comes from China. 
Ms. Wood feels similarly skeptical. "We just don't think it's safe," she says. 
She wishes food labels were more specific. For instance, she has a jar of 
olives that says "Product of Canada" on it. 
"Now, we know we don't have olive trees in Canada," Ms. Wood says. "So where 
does it come from?" 
Made in China 
The top 10 foods in volume Canada imported from China in 2006 (in millions of 
kilograms). 
Mandarins, clementines and similar citrus hybrids, fresh/dried 33.9
Frozen fish fillets                                            24.4
Apple juice                                                    21.7 (millions 
of litres)
Pears and quinces, fresh                                       13.6
Raw peanuts                                                    10.6
Frozen shrimps and prawns                                      10.4
Pasta                                                          10.3
Mushrooms                                                      8.9
Other citrus fruits                                            8.8
Shrimps and prawns, prepared or preserved                      7.3
   

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