Tainted cooking oil scandal revives China food safety fears

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Over the years, China has been rocked by a series of food-safety scandals which still reverberate.

Over the years, China has been rocked by a series of food safety scandals that still reverberate.

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: UNSPLASH

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BEIJING – Cooking oil produced by a major Chinese state-run company was removed from leading online stores after concerns over contamination revived consumer fears about food safety in a country scarred by past scandals.

Jinding brand cooking oil – produced by conglomerate China Grain Reserves Corp, also known as Sinograin – was withdrawn from platforms including Taobao and JD.com.

That followed a report last week in state-run Beijing News, which described tankers being filled with soya bean oil at crushing facilities owned by companies, including Sinograin, immediately after

unloading inedible coal oil and without being checked for cleanliness

It was not immediately clear why the products were taken down from virtual shelves, but the speed of reaction and outrage online are a reminder that worries over food quality continue to rattle both Chinese consumers and officials.

The scandal comes at a difficult time for Beijing’s leadership, just as the party’s most senior officials prepare to gather in the capital and at a time when shoppers’ confidence is already weak.

Sinograin has started an internal probe into the matter and vowed to punish employees who had violated rules.

Regulators are also tightening scrutiny, with the State Administration for Market Regulation setting up a joint investigation team to look into the alleged use of fuel tankers to transport cooking oil.

The Communist Party-run People’s Daily newspaper has referred to the tank truck incident as a practice that was effectively “an open secret”.

“This severely damages public health,” the paper said earlier this week. “There should be no tolerance for any problems in food safety” in China.

Over the years, China has been rocked by a series of food safety scandals that still reverberate, including an incident over adulterated milk in 2008 that killed six children and poisoned some 300,000 more.

A top pork processor apologised for sanitary failings in 2022 after a report showing

meat dropping on the floor and workers in dirty uniforms

. Other similar instances are not uncommon.

“There is no food safety,” one Weibo user wrote in a comment to a news report on tainted oil tankers. “We only need to make sure food won’t lead to death after being eaten.” BLOOMBERG

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