Chinese Poultry Processors Will Be Allowed To Export Meat To The U.S., USDA Rules

Are Your Chicken Nuggets From China?
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hanged chickens displayed in...

Where do chicken nuggets come from? The answer may not be straightforward following the Department of Agriculture's announcement on Friday that it has approved four Chinese poultry processors to begin shipping meat to the U.S.

According to The New York Times, the poultry that processors are allowed to ship will initially be restricted to cooked meat from birds raised in the U.S. But critics worry that the rules will change in the future, opening the door for poultry raised and slaughtered in China -- a country notorious for its food safety problems -- to be shipped to the U.S.

Among those critics is Tony Corbo, a senior lobbyist for the advocacy group Food and Water Watch. “This is the first step towards allowing China to export its own domestic chickens to the U.S.,” he told the Times.

Corbo has reason to be concerned; in the last months alone, Chinese police discovered an illegal food smuggling plot to sell 46-year-old chicken feet treated with bleach, a criminal ring accused of selling rat and fox meat as lamb and abnormally high levels of cadmium, a metal that can cause cancer and other illnesses, in rice sold in Guangzhou restaurants.

Also troubling, an explosion at a Chinese poultry factory in June killed at least 119 people, and concerns over avian flu remain rampant. Earlier this year, 20,000 birds were euthanized after the human death toll in China rose to six.

Unlike other meat imported to the U.S., the poultry shipped by Chinese processors will not require point-of-origin labeling. Under USDA rules, the labeling does not apply to foods that have been cooked.

"Consumers will have no way to tell if those chicken nuggets in the supermarket freezer were processed in the U.S. or in China," writes Bloomberg correspondent Adam Minter. Moreover, the USDA will not require its own regulators to supervise the processors on premises.

Point-of-origin labeling is relatively new in the U.S. (new rules went into effect and May), but has proved unpopular with meat producers. In July, industry groups filed a suit against the USDA, which charges that requiring more information about a product's origin on its label is too expensive and provides no benefit to public safety or health.

Read the USDA's full audit of the Chinese processors here.

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Before You Go

Food Scandals That Have Rocked The World
Horsemeat in Beef Products: Europe(01 of06)
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The ongoing horsemeat scandal has disrupted the food chain in a major way throughout Europe. Horsemeat has been found in various meat products sold in Europe ranging from burgers to frozen lasagna. Arrests have been made, innocence has been claimed and a lot of unrest and conversations about global food safety have resulted. (credit:Getty)
Tainted Milk: China(02 of06)
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China has had a slew of issues with tainted milk for the past several years. The scandal came to light in 2008 when at least six children died after consuming milk that contained melamine, an industrial chemical that causes kidney stones in children. Transparency was a huge issue in this scandal, as it was discovered that authorities investigated a dairy for a year before going public with the information about tainted products.In more recent years, other problems with China's milk have continued to arise. (credit:Alamy)
Mad Cow: Great Britain(03 of06)
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Mad cow disease was first discovered in the mid-1980s in the U.K. It wreaked havoc on the beef industry, and caused at least 80 deaths. There have been a few incidents of mad cow disease in the U.S. as well, one as recent as last year. The effects of mad cow are still present -- anyone that spent at least three months in the UK between January 1, 1980, and December 31, 1996 is not able to donate blood. (credit:AP)
Pink Slime: U.S.(04 of06)
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"Pink slime" as a descriptor sounds pretty gross. Which is perhaps part of the reason why the term caught on like wildfire, and eventually led to several beef processing plants shutting down, along with libel cases against media organizations to boot. It all started when chef Jamie Oliver brought the term to light -- pink slime referred to a controversial beef additive made up of spare beef trimmings that have been treated with ammonium hydroxide to make them safe and at least semi-palatable.While the additive may have been safe enough for consumption (though not at all appetizing), fear-mongering coupled with distrust of the beef industry led to a massive outcry, and the closure of three plants. (credit:AP)
Sprouts with E. Coli: Europe(05 of06)
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In 2011, over 30 people died and over 3,000 people were sickened from sprouts that contained E. coli. This has been the world's deadliest E. coli outbreak. People in over a dozen countries were sickened before the sprouts were eventually linked to a German farm. (credit:AP)
Cantaloupe with Listeria: U.S.(06 of06)
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In 2011, the listeria outbreak in cantaloupe was noted as the deadliest outbreak of food-related illness in more than 10 years in the United States. Thirty people died and 146 were sickened. In 2012, there was another big cantaloupe recall from a different farm. The farm eventually shut its doors, noting "It’s just a matter of time when there will be another outbreak somewhere.” (credit:AP)