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			Tainted Chinese berries may spur reform of Australian food labeling 
			
   
            
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		[February 20, 2015] By 
		Jane Wardell 
			
		SYDNEY (Reuters) - An outbreak of hepatitis 
		A in Australia, probably caused by frozen berries packaged in China, is 
		giving added impetus to moves to tighten the country's murky food 
		labeling laws and could fuel a backlash against imported food. 
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			 Proposed changes that would more clearly identify the origin of food 
			on supermarket shelves, combined with growing pressure on consumers 
			to buy local produce, may curb the appetite for Chinese imports and 
			could undercut a landmark free trade deal. 
			 
			"I want to make sure I do everything in my power to say to people 
			'your safest food is your domestic food'," Federal Agriculture 
			Minister Barnaby Joyce said on Wednesday. 
			 
			Thirteen Australians have been diagnosed with hepatitis A, a viral 
			disease affecting the liver, after eating frozen mixed berries sold 
			by Patties Foods Ltd and health officials expect to identify more 
			cases in coming weeks. 
			 
			The berries were grown in Chile and China before being packaged at a 
			Chinese factory, where poor hygiene and tainted water supplies are 
			thought to have caused the health problems. Hepatitis A is passed 
			through contact with material that has been contaminated with faeces 
			from an infected person. 
			 
			The case has given impetus to a bill introduced into the Australian 
			parliament a week ago by the minority opposition Greens Party, which 
			wants more informative labeling on products for sale in Australia. 
			
			  
			Under current laws, the term "made from Australian and imported 
			ingredients" is common, providing no detail on the exact origins of 
			all the ingredients in a product or where it was packaged. 
			 
			Imported food products have to undergo less stringent safety tests 
			during and after production than local produce, farmers' groups say. 
			 
			Joyce said the weak country-of-origin labeling laws allowed 
			manufacturers to use "sneaky terms" to "earn a premium" on cheaply 
			made products. 
			 
			Farming and consumer groups say the case highlights long-term food 
			safety problems in China, the third-largest source of Australia's 
			food imports, where rapid industrialisation has polluted soil and 
			water supplies. Poor hygiene in production and packaging plants is 
			also a big concern. 
			 
			"The current issue with imported frozen berries highlights the need 
			for clearer country-of-origin labeling, as it appears consumers may 
			have been confused about where they came from," said Ian Harrison, 
			chief executive of lobby group Australian Made Campaign. 
			 
			"Buy local" campaigns are increasingly prevalent in Australia and 
			are gaining traction. 
			
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			A July 2013 Roy Morgan poll showed more than 60 percent of 
			Australians sometimes bought products because they were made in 
			Australia even when they were more expensive than imported rivals. 
			Only 12 percent said price would deter them from buying Australian 
			products. 
			TRADE DEALS 
			 
			Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who late last year signed a free trade 
			deal with China, is less enamoured with changing country-of-origin 
			labeling laws, saying he is wary of imposing new regulations that 
			could send food prices soaring. 
			Trade agreements make such changes tricky politically. Australia 
			needs the trade pact with China to help it move from a reliance on 
			exports of coal and iron ore to expanding its food and agricultural 
			shipments to a growing Asian middle class. 
			 
			There is also the risk of appearing contradictory. Australia is one 
			of a number of countries that have taken action in the World Trade 
			Organization (WTO) against the United States after it introduced its 
			own stronger country-of-origin labeling laws for beef products last 
			year. 
			 
			Abbott said the government would look at toughening up screening 
			processes for imported goods but put the impetus on the food 
			industry to make its own checks. 
			 
			Patties Foods has withdrawn the frozen berries from sale and 
			stressed it carried out all the tests required under Australian law 
			but it will probably face a class action lawsuit. Its shares have 
			fallen 10 percent since it announced the product recall over the 
			weekend. 
			
			  
			 
			(Editing by Alan Raybould) 
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