Taiwan - US beef import ban
18/06/2015 10:26
Taiwan's Department of Health (DOH) announced last week it has once again detected residues of lean-promoting drug ractopamine in beef products imported from the U.S., according to Focus Taiwan News Channel.
Public health authorities at the DOH keep statistics on ractopamine residues and so far they have found 1.9 percent of U.S. beef to contain residual levels of ractopamine, a drug that is approved for use in food animal production in two dozen countries, including the U.S., Canada, and Brazil, but banned by the EU, China and Taiwan.
Focus Taiwan reported that the drug -- which promotes leanness and feed efficiency by diverting nutrients away from fat -- was recently detected in three batches of U.S. beef products awaiting customs clearance in Taiwan. Local Food and Drug Administration officials said products were ordered to be shipped back or destroyed.
19 Sep 2011
Source: meattradenewsdaily.co.uk
Các tin khác
- New-generation FTAs open wider export opportunities to Middle East and South Asia (15/06/2026)
- Updated regulations on foreign trade management and import quotas (15/06/2026)
- Mandatory traceability for high-risk goods from July 1st: What should businesses prepare for? (15/06/2026)
- Tariff pressure is forcing businesses to restructure in order to adapt. (15/06/2026)
- Coffee Citizens model aims to lift Vietnamese value chain (15/06/2026)
About Us
