Contaminated animal-feed
Posted: Thu May 31, 2007 1:34 pm
Thought this might be of interest to somebody.
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Ever since pet food contaminated with an industrial chemical was traced to shipments of wheat flour from China, U.S. officials have concentrated on cracking down on imports.
It turns out the problem was closer to home, too.
U.S. officials said Wednesday that a manufacturing plant in Ohio was using the same banned substance, melamine, to make binding agents that ended up in feed for farmed fish, shrimp and livestock.
The problem surfaced after a distributor, concerned about what was in its feed after the reports from China, sent the product to a private laboratory for testing.
The melamine was used by Tembec BTLSR, a Canadian forest products company with a small chemical plant in Toledo, Ohio, to make binding agents that keep pellets of animal feed together, said David Acheson, assistant commissioner for food protection at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Read full artcile here:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/31/ ... -65273.php
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Ever since pet food contaminated with an industrial chemical was traced to shipments of wheat flour from China, U.S. officials have concentrated on cracking down on imports.
It turns out the problem was closer to home, too.
U.S. officials said Wednesday that a manufacturing plant in Ohio was using the same banned substance, melamine, to make binding agents that ended up in feed for farmed fish, shrimp and livestock.
The problem surfaced after a distributor, concerned about what was in its feed after the reports from China, sent the product to a private laboratory for testing.
The melamine was used by Tembec BTLSR, a Canadian forest products company with a small chemical plant in Toledo, Ohio, to make binding agents that keep pellets of animal feed together, said David Acheson, assistant commissioner for food protection at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Read full artcile here:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/31/ ... -65273.php