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Pet food recall expands - rice protein contaminated — Brooklynian

Pet food recall expands - rice protein contaminated

8thandprez
edited November -1 in Brooklyn Pets
Hot off the wire:

http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070418/pet_food_recall.html?.v=4

AP
Second Tainted Pet Food Ingredient Found
Wednesday April 18, 6:55 pm ET
By Andrew Bridges, Associated Press Writer
Pet Food Recall Expanded; Industrial Chemical Found in Second Ingredient

WASHINGTON (AP) -- An industrial chemical that led to the nationwide recall of more than 100 brands of cat and dog food has turned up in a second pet food ingredient imported from China.
..........
The discovery expands the monthlong cascade of recalls to include more brands and varieties of pet foods and treats tainted by the chemical.
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Natural Balance said it was recalling all its Venison and Brown Rice canned and bagged dog foods, its Venison and Brown Rice dog treats and its Venison and Green Pea dry cat food.

Comments

  • jesus. wellness brand hasn't been compromised, right?
  • Wellness wasn't affected by the wheat gluten contamination. I'm not sure about the rice protein contamination. We switched from Nutro pouches, which contained contaminated wheat gluten, to California Natural dry food. It's just chicken, chicken meal, and vitamins.... hopefully chicken won't be the next item recalled....
  • Basically, pet food production is currently in a state similar to pre-Upton Sinclair meat production for people. And it's unlikely to change, because the kind of regulation and monitoring required to significantly raise the standards would probably be too expensive to implement.
  • Well, we could always lay on some pressure through the WTO. Isn't this one of the main strengths of our membership in this trade body?
  • Carnivore wrote: Basically, pet food production is currently in a state similar to pre-Upton Sinclair meat production for people. And it's unlikely to change, because the kind of regulation and monitoring required to significantly raise the standards would probably be too expensive to implement.
    But if it were 1900, the ingredients would more likely be local, or at least *more* local and traceable. If you need convincing about the downside of the global markets, here you have it.
    This new story makes.me.crazy.
    Both ingredients were imported from China, though by different companies and from different manufacturers.

    The FDA on Wednesday began reviewing and sampling all rice protein concentrate imported from China, much as the agency has been doing for wheat gluten, Rogers said.

    A lawmaker said Wednesday the Chinese have refused to grant visas to FDA inspectors seeking to visit the plants where the ingredients were made. An FDA spokesman later said the visas were not refused but that the agency had not received the necessary invitation letter to get visas.

    "It troubles me greatly the Chinese are making it more difficult to understand what led to this pet food crisis," Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., told The Associated Press after meeting with the FDA commissioner, Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach.

    A message left Wednesday with the Chinese Embassy in Washington was not immediately returned.
  • Natural Balance recalls venison dog, cat foods
    POSTED: 10:04 p.m. EDT, April 17, 2007

    Story Highlights
    • Natural Balance recalls types of dog, cat food
    • Venison & Brown Rice Dry Dog Food , Venison & Green Pea Dry Cat Food recalled
    • Last month, Menu food recalled 60,000 cans of pet food
    • Large veterinary chain sees 30 percent increase in kidney failure

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Natural Balance Pet Foods recalled two kinds of pet food after receiving reports of animals vomiting and experiencing kidney problems, the Food and Drug Administration said Monday.

    The recall includes all date codes of Venison & Brown Rice Dry Dog Food and Venison & Green Pea Dry Cat Food.

    The company does not know the cause of the problem, but said it is focused on one particular lot.

    Natural Balance Pet Foods is working with the FDA to investigate the matter and is urging consumers to not feed either pet food product to their animals.

    Last month, Menu Foods recalled 60 million cans of dog and cat food after the deaths of 16 pets, mostly cats, that ate its products. (Details on recall)

    The FDA said tests indicated the food was contaminated with an industrial chemical, melamine.

    At least six pet food companies have recalled products made with imported Chinese wheat gluten tainted with the chemical. The recall involved about 1 percent of the U.S. pet food supply.

    FDA spokeswoman Julie Zawisza said the agency had no indication that the Natural Balance case is related to the melamine problem.

    Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
  • http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-na-petfood20apr20,0,508184.story?coll=la-home-headlines
    Spiking theorized in pet deaths
    The FDA says Chinese firms may have added a chemical to falsely boost a food ingredient.
    By Marc Lifsher and Abigail Goldman, Times Staff Writers
    April 20, 2007

    - Websites tally more pet deaths related to tainted food
    Chinese manufacturers may have intentionally added a chemical linked to pet deaths and illnesses into a protein-powder ingredient in pet foods, federal regulators said Thursday.

    Stephen Sundlof, chief veterinarian for the Food and Drug Administration, said melamine, which has turned up in more than 100 brands of cat and dog food, may have been used to falsely boost the apparent nutritional content of rice protein.

    "That's still a theory but it certainly seems to be a plausible one," he said.

    Melamine, an ingredient in plastics and fertilizers that could lead to kidney failure in animals, has contaminated rice protein and wheat gluten in pet foods made in Canada and the U.S.

    The chemical compound reportedly also has tainted corn gluten added to pet food sold in South Africa, the FDA said.

    FDA officials said they were investigating whether the melamine might have been added intentionally as a way to charge more for an inferior product. The fact that three protein sources from China contained melamine adds credibility to that theory, Sundlof said.

    But the FDA added that it would not be able to check its theory without approval from the Chinese government to inspect the factories where the rice protein and wheat gluten were produced. The FDA said it "fully expects" to get such cooperation.

    The Chinese government has said that the contaminated wheat gluten was not meant for pet foods and therefore was not its regulatory responsibility.

    The FDA said it had traced the contaminated wheat gluten to Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Co. in Jiangsu province, just north of Shanghai. The company's general manager, Mao Lijun, said this week that his firm was still investigating the matter. He declined to answer questions.

    The FDA also said the North American manufacturers shared some responsibility for ensuring the safety of their pet foods.

    "There is an industry responsibility to know who their suppliers are and to exercise some diligence," said Michael Rogers, head of the FDA's division of field investigations.

    Pacoima-based Natural Balance Pet Foods, which this week voluntarily recalled four types of dog food containing rice protein, said it would be wary of using any Chinese-made ingredients.

    "I can't imagine we'll be using Chinese ingredients again. If we do, clearly it will be with much scrutiny," said spokesman Daniel Bernstein.

    Bernstein said the four recalled brands, containing venison and brown rice or venison and green peas, were manufactured by Diamond Pet Foods Inc. of Meta, Mo. Diamond, in turn, bought the rice protein from Wilbur-Ellis Co., a San Francisco-based firm that sells animal feed.

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

    Times staff writer Don Lee in Shanghai contributed to this report.

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