The Horsemeat scandal running wild across Europe didn’t exactly break out of the starting gate. It began at a canter in January, when the Food Safety Authority of Ireland found isolated cases of horsemeat in beef burgers sold in British and Irish supermarkets.The story gained global attention, picking up its pace to a full gallop, in mid-February when European food regulators discovered horsemeat in school meals and hospitals across Europe and the U.K. Major supermarkets, fast food chains and food manufacturers, such as Burger King, IKEA,Nestle and Iglo Food Group, have since recalled products. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Tag Archives: Food Safety Authority
The Romanian Horse Cart Ban That’s (Probably) Behind Europe’s Horse Meat Scandal
By Nadia Arumugam, Contributor
By now you’ve read more than you probably care to read about Europe’s latest stomach-churning food scandal. Yes, that would be the one about frozen burgers, lasagna and spaghetti Bolognese masquerading as all-beef products, when in reality they consist of some beef combined with varying amounts of that other red meat; horse.
But just in case you’ve a renewed appetite for this fast-evolving saga, read on as we try to unravel just where on earth all this horse meat is coming from?
It’s likely that shoppers at major UK supermarkets have been buying and consuming these equine-tinged products for up to a year ignorant of their true contents. Following recent DNA testing, grocery giant Tesco has admitted that the ground meat in the frozen spaghetti Bolognese in its “Everyday Value” range is more than 60 percent horse.
A month ago, the Food Safety Authority of Ireland discovered that frozen burgers in the same Tesco range contained approximately 29% horse meat. Frozen patties in other major stores made by processing plants in Ireland and in the north of England– also suppliers to Tesco, were similarly contaminated. In one out of nine burgers tested, the Irish authorities found low levels of horse meat. This spate of discoveries in Ireland sparked off the comprehensive investigation that has led to fingers being pointed in all and every direction.
Officials in Ireland believe that the horse meat in the products they tested were Polish in provenance. But it doesn’t end there with the Poles.
The Tesco “spag bol” – as the Brits endearingly refer to this favorite dish, was made by Comigel, a supplier in northeastern France. Comigel produced the now infamous lasagna for Swedish frozen food brand Findus. Yes, the one found to contain 100 percent horse meat.
Findus claims to have been entirely oblivious to the horse meat ingredients that were found in its “beef” products in the UK, France and Sweden, believing itself to be as much a victim as the consumer.
Comigel supplies tens of thousands of tons of frozen meals to around 15 countries. The company risks having to cough up massive fines as a consequence of the scandal, even if it’s found that its suppliers committed the alleged fraud.
So then, where are these suppliers, and where are they getting the horsemeat from? The supply chain, it seems, reportedly snakes back to traders in Cyprus and the Netherlands, then to abattoirs in Romania. Take a moment to study Romania’s laws governing equine transport, and therein you may find the reason why Romania has been peddling excess horse meat of late.
In 2007, as part of efforts to bring Romania in step with European Union law, the country banned horse-drawn carts from main roads in cities and towns. Horse had been intrinsic to Romanian life pulling carts through the streets or working the fields. Following the ban, countless numbers of stray horses have been abandoned. Starving and with nowhere to go, they roam the streets and parks of Romania’s major cities.
Consequently, the emaciated horses are rounded up and if left unclaimed (almost all are), they are sent to slaughterhouses. Abandoned animals aside, poor Romanians are selling their horses to slaughterhouses because they can’t afford to keep them. The monthly income of subsistence farmers in the countryside is less than the costs of feeding a horse for that period. According to an Associated Press report, costs run between €100 ($135) and €150 ($200) to keep a horse every month — up to 40 percent of the average national salary.
There are 35 processing plants in Romania that are authorized to slaughter horses, and horse exports are on the increase, up 10 percent in the last year. The Romanian government has vehemently denied any wrongdoing on the part of its slaughterhouses. Adamant that all the horse meat exported was properly labeled, the Romanian Prime Minister feels his country is being used as a scapegoat in this crisis.
The slaughterhouse which supplied Comigel with its “mystery meat” was indeed Romanian. The Kravys abattoir, in Botosani, northeastern Romania, slaughters 3,000 to 4,000 horses annually and exports the meat to Sweden, the Netherlands, Bulgaria and Poland. In a report by the BBC, the abattoir insists that its labeling and procedures are above board, with horsemeat and beef kept clearly apart.
Could the real villain then, be lurking elsewhere?
At the heart of the scandal, it’s now alleged, are two meat traders, one from Oosterhout (in southwest Netherlands) and the other, known as Jan F., the director of a Cyprus-based meat trading company called Draap Trading.
Incidentally, Draap is horse in Dutch, spelt backwards.
These men are said to be the missing link between Romanian abattoirs and French suppliers. Both men have been convicted in the past for passing off South American horse meat as halal-slaughtered Dutch beef.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
PM: Horsemeat scandal harming Ireland's reputation
Ireland‘s prime minister says the latest finding of horsemeat in products labeled as Polish beef is harming Ireland‘s reputation as an exporter of high-quality meat products.
Enda Kenny spoke before Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting to discuss the widening scandal. Food Safety Authority of Ireland scientists made the discovery last month by conducting DNA tests on dozens of beef burger brands and finding some contained horse as a substantial ingredient.
Irish investigators have pinned the problem on Polish offcuts imported to Ireland for use as filler in factory-made burger patties. Poland says it has found no evidence to support Ireland‘s charges.
In results announced Monday, Ireland says one sample of the Polish-labeled product was found to be 75 percent horsemeat.
Kenny says identifying the source is “a matter of reputation.”
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Suppliers, grocers turning to DNA testing on meat
Horsemeat might not be bad for you to eat, but it’s definitely bad for sales of products labeled as beef.
But Ireland‘s surprise discovery of horsemeat traces in many factory-produced burgers is boosting business for one trade: Forensics labs able to use DNA fingerprinting to tell pig from fowl.
Until now, supermarkets and food processors have not employed DNA testing of their meat products to confirm whether there are traces of other species in products marked as chicken, pork, beef, lamb or fish. That’s because such findings have no bearing on food safety, only the integrity of labeling.
But a string of food processors and retailers say they’re planning to introduce such testing after the Food Safety Authority of Ireland — determined to confirm whether food labels on meat and fish are honest and accurate — has used DNA testing to show that “pure” processed meat products often contain traces of other animals slaughtered in the same facilities or carried in the same vehicles.
Worse, the agency’s testing found that bargain-brand burgers produced at the Silvercrest food processing plant for sale by British supermarket king Tesco contained up to 29 percent horsemeat, a revelation that government and Silvercrest officials eventually pinned to a powdered “filler” ingredient imported from Poland.
Tesco, which saw its shares slump following the news, announced Wednesday it will become the first supermarket chain to perform DNA tests on its meat products.
“These checks will set a new standard,” Tesco, the largest grocer in both Britain and Ireland, said in a statement. “We want to leave customers in no doubt that that we will do whatever it takes to ensure the quality of their food and that the food they buy is exactly what the label says it is.”
Industry analysts expect other supermarket chains in Britain and further afield to follow suit, because the cross-contamination detected in Ireland is likely to happen in processed meat products worldwide.
“This sort of species testing simply has not been done in other nations. It looks like that’s going to change,” said Patrick Wall, the professor of public health at University College Dublin and former chairman of the Food Safety Authority for the 27-nation European Union.
Beef is Ireland‘s No. 1 food export, and Tesco is Ireland‘s No. 1 customer, accounting for nearly one tenth of the country’s annual €1.9 billion ($2.5 billion) in beef exports.
Silvercrest supplied most of the supermarket chains in Ireland and Britain. After the Irish findings that more than one third of its burgers contained horsemeat traces below 0.1 percent — and one batch of Tesco burgers contained 29 percent horsemeat — Silvercrest withdrew about 10 million burgers from those stores. It suspended operations once a second round of DNA tests found more horsemeat traces in recently produced burgers.
In a statement Silvercrest’s parent company ABP Foods said it understood Tesco’s decision and said it had already decided to begin its own practice of random DNA testing of products at all its facilities in Ireland and Britain. Other Irish processors say they, too, plan to follow suit.
Food policy experts say meat labels may eventually be changed in many countries to reflect the kind of warnings already familiar for people allergic to nuts: This beef product may contain traces of other animals.
Wall said consumers shouldn’t be unduly unsettled by the Irish findings, which included results showing that most cheaply produced “beef” burgers also contained minute elements of pork. He said such molecular transfers were almost impossible to prevent though, until now, they hadn’t been measured.
“People need to understand how sensitive these DNA tests are,” Wall said. “This thing will pick up molecules. So if horsemeat traveled in a refrigerated lorry one day and beef was carried in it the next day, molecules would travel over. If horsemeat was boned out on a premises, and if beef was subsequently boned out, you could get carry-over of molecules.”
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News