Showing posts with label Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zealand. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Kim Dotcom’s Mega to get listing at New Zealand stock exchange

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Kim Dotcom’s Mega to get listing at New Zealand stock exchange

Sunday, August 4, 2013

China bans New Zealand milk powder imports on botulism scare: NZ trade min




WELLINGTON | Sun Aug 4, 2013 12:11am EDT



WELLINGTON (Reuters) – China has halted imports of all New Zealand milk powder, New Zealand’s trade minister said on Sunday, after bacteria that can cause botulism found in some dairy products raised food safety concerns that threatened its $ 9.4 billion annual dairy trade.


Global dairy trade giant Fonterra said on Saturday it had sold contaminated New Zealand-made whey protein concentrate to eight customers in Australia, China, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Saudi Arabia for use in a range of products, including infant milk powder.


Nearly 90 percent of China’s $ 1.9 billion in milk powder imports last year originated in New Zealand, so a prolonged ban could result in a shortage of dairy products in China.


Foreign-branded infant formula in particular is a prized commodity in China given consumer distrust of Chinese brands after a series of domestic food safety scandals.


New Zealand’s neighbor Australia was caught up in the ban after some of the contaminated whey protein concentrate was exported there before being sent on to China and elsewhere.


“The authorities in China, in my opinion absolutely appropriately, have stopped all imports of New Zealand milk powders from Australia and New Zealand,” New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser told Television New Zealand on Sunday.


“It’s better to do blanket protection for your people and then wind it back when we, our authorities, are in a position to give them the confidence and advice that they need before doing that,” he said.


There was no official word of a ban from Chinese authorities early on Sunday.


On Saturday, Chinese state radio said Fonterra was notifying three Chinese firms affected by the contamination. Some of China’s biggest food and beverage companies are said to be customers of Fonterra, using its milk powder as an ingredient in everything from confectionery to cheese on frozen pizza.


Fonterra is a major supplier of bulk milk powder products used in formula in China but it had stayed out of branding after Chinese dairy company Sanlu, in which it had held a large stake, was found to have added melamine – often used in plastics – to bulk up formulas in 2008. More than six children died in the industry-wide scandal and hundreds were made sick.


BANS, RECALLS


Other countries also were reportedly halting imports and ordering recalls of New Zealand-made dairy products.


Russia has suspended imports and circulation of Fonterra products, Russia’s ITAR-TASS news agency said on Saturday, quoting consumer watchdog Rospotrebnadzor.


Media reports late on Saturday said Thailand had ordered a recall of Fonterra products imported since May.


New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries said five batches of follow-on baby formula marketed by Karicare, a popular brand in China, had been contaminated by the bacteria, although none had entered the retail supply chain.


Those products sitting in storage facilities would be held back from the market, it said.


Farmer-owned Fonterra is a big supplier of wholesale dairy ingredients to multinational food and beverage companies. It also markets its own consumer brands, including Anchor milk in New Zealand and Anlene and Anmum maternal milk formula, which is available in Southeast Asia and other regions.


It said all of its own brands were free of contamination and that there had been no reports of any illness linked to the affected whey protein. It added that Fonterra CEO Theo Spierings was travelling to China to discuss the issue.


The incident is the second this year involving New Zealand’s largest company. In January, Fonterra said it had found traces of dicyandiamde, a potentially toxic chemical used in fertilizer, in some of its products.


The bacteria behind the latest scare, Clostridium Botulinum, is often found in soil. The Fonterra case was caused by a dirty pipe at a processing plant.


It can cause botulism, a potentially fatal disease that affects the muscles and can cause respiratory problems. Infant botulism can attack the intestinal system.


The contamination issue comes as China has started to tighten dairy import regulations to improve overall food safety. In recent weeks, Beijing has introduced regulations restricting the operations of smaller infant formula brands.


New Zealand’s dairy industry is a big driver of the country’s agriculture-based economy, with its NZ$ 12 billion in exports last year accounting for around 25 percent of total merchandise exports. ($ 1 = 1.2767 New Zealand dollars)


(Additional reporting by Lincoln Feast in Sydney; Editing by Paul Tait)





Reuters: Most Read Articles



China bans New Zealand milk powder imports on botulism scare: NZ trade min

Saturday, August 3, 2013

New Zealand botulism scare triggers global recall








FILE – In this March 29, 2007 file photo, Fonterra’s Whareroa processing plant is seen near New Plymouth, New Zealand. New Zealand authorities have triggered a global recall of up to 1,000 tons of dairy products across seven countries after Fonterra, the world’s fourth-largest dairy company, announced tests had turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism. New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries said Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 that the tainted products include infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. It said countries affected beside New Zealand include China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia. (AP Photo/NZPA, Rob Tucker, File) NEW ZEALAND OUT, NO SALES





FILE – In this March 29, 2007 file photo, Fonterra’s Whareroa processing plant is seen near New Plymouth, New Zealand. New Zealand authorities have triggered a global recall of up to 1,000 tons of dairy products across seven countries after Fonterra, the world’s fourth-largest dairy company, announced tests had turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism. New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries said Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 that the tainted products include infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. It said countries affected beside New Zealand include China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia. (AP Photo/NZPA, Rob Tucker, File) NEW ZEALAND OUT, NO SALES





In this Oct 14, 2004 photo, Fonterra’s Hautapu dairy factory is seen in the Waikato, New Zealand. New Zealand authorities have triggered a global recall of up to 1,000 tons of dairy products across seven countries after Fonterra, the world’s fourth-largest dairy company, announced tests had turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism. New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries said Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 that the tainted products include infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. It said countries affected beside New Zealand include China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia. (AP Photo/New Zealand Herald, Greg Bowker) NEW ZEALAND OUT, AUSTRALIA OUT













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(AP) — New Zealand authorities have triggered a global recall of up to 1,000 tons of dairy products across seven countries after dairy giant Fonterra announced tests had turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism.


New Zealand’s Ministry of Primary Industries said Saturday that the tainted products include infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. It said countries affected beside New Zealand include China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.


Fonterra said its customers were urgently checking their supply chains.


One New Zealand company has locked down five batches of infant formula and China is asking importers to immediately recall products.


Fonterra is the world’s fourth-largest dairy company, with annual revenues of about $ 16 billion.


The news comes as a blow to New Zealand’s dairy industry, which powers the country’s economy. New Zealand exports about 95 percent of its milk.


Consumers in China and elsewhere are willing to pay a big premium for New Zealand infant formula because the country has a clean and healthy reputation. Chinese consumers have a special interest after tainted local milk formula killed six babies in 2008.


The Centers for Disease Control describes botulism as a rare but sometimes fatal paralytic illness caused by a nerve toxin.


Fonterra said it has told eight of its customers of the problem, which dates back more than a year, and they were investigating whether any of the affected product is in their supply chains. Fonterra said those companies will initiate any consumer product recalls.


At a news conference Saturday, Fonterra repeatedly refused to divulge the companies, countries or specific products affected. Gary Romano, the managing director of Fonterra’s New Zealand milk products, said his company supplies raw materials to the eight companies and it is up to them to inform their consumers of what products might be tainted.


The company did acknowledge its chief executive, Theo Spierings, planned to fly to China Saturday, in part to deal with the fallout from the botulism scare.


New Zealand’s Ministry for Primary Industries said Saturday that New Zealand company Nutricia had used some of the tainted product in its Karicare line of formula for infants aged over 6 months. Nutricia had locked down all five batches of infant formula it believed contained the tainted product, the ministry said. But it advised that parents should buy different Nutricia products or alternative brands until it verified the location of all tainted Nutricia products.


China’s product quality watchdog issued a statement urging importers of Fonterra dairy products to immediately start recalling the products.


The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine also told quality agencies around China to step up inspections of milk products from New Zealand.


Romano said the problem was caused by unsterilized pipes at a Waikato factory. He said three batches of whey protein weighing about 42 tons were tainted in May 2012, adding that Fonterra has since cleaned the pipes.


The New Zealand ministry says the tainted product has been mixed with other ingredients to form about 1,000 tons of consumer products worldwide.


The company said in a release it identified a potential quality problem in March when a product tested positive for the bacteria Clostridium. Many strains of the bacteria are harmless, the company said, and product samples were put through intensive testing over the following months. It said that on July 31 it discovered the presence of a strain of the bacteria that can cause botulism.


Romano said Fonterra hasn’t received reports of anybody getting sick and added that the problem hasn’t affected any fresh milk, yoghurt, cheese or long-lasting heat-treated milk.


New Zealand’s Ministry for Primary Industries said it was working with the company to investigate.


Spierings, the chief executive, said in the release that food safety was the company’s top priority.


“We are acting quickly,” he said. “Our focus is to get information out about potentially affected product as fast as possible so that it can be taken off supermarket shelves and, where it has already been purchased, can be returned.”


Earlier this year, Fonterra announced it had discovered trace amounts of the agricultural chemical dicyandiamide in some of its products, prompting a ban on the chemical’s use on New Zealand farms.


Rabobank’s 2012 Global Dairy Top 20 report ranked Fonterra as the world’s fourth-largest dairy company by revenue behind Nestlé, Danone and Lactalis. The company is a cooperative, partially owned by thousands of farmers.


In 2011 the company collected 15.4 billion liters (4.1 billion gallons) of milk in New Zealand, representing about 90 percent of the country’s total.


In 2008, six babies in China died and another 300,000 were sickened by infant formula that was tainted with melamine, an industrial chemical added to watered-down milk to fool tests for protein levels. Fonterra at the time owned a minority stake in Sanlu, the now-bankrupt Chinese company at the center of the scandal.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



New Zealand botulism scare triggers global recall

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Man "too fat" to live in New Zealand


Overweight man eats sandwichNearly 30% of adults are overweight in New Zealand


Authorities in New Zealand have told a South African chef he is too fat to be allowed to live in the country.


Immigration officials said Albert Buitenhuis, who weighs 130kg (286 pounds), did not have “an acceptable standard of health”.


He now faces expulsion despite shedding 30kg since he moved to the city of Christchurch six years ago


New Zealand has one of the highest obesity rates in the developed world, with nearly 30% of people overweight.


Mr Buitenhuis and his wife, Marthie, moved from South Africa to Christchurch in 2007. At the time, the chef weighed 160 kg.


Until now, their annual work visas had been renewed with “very little problem”, his wife said.


“We applied year after year and there were no issues,” she said.


“They never mentioned Albert’s weight or his health once and he was a lot heavier then.”


But in early May, the couple was told their work visas had been declined because of Mr Buitenhuis’s weight.


“The irony is that at the moment he weighs less than when we first arrived in New Zealand and also less than in his first medical, which was accepted by [immigration authorities],” his wife said.


The couple has appealed to New Zealand’s immigration minister, citing the chef’s recent weight loss.


An immigration spokesman said Mr Buitenhuis was rejected because his obesity put him at “significant risk” of complications including diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and obstructive sleep apnoea.


“It is important that all migrants have an acceptable standard of health to minimise costs and demands on New Zealand’s health services,” he said.




BBC News – Asia



Man "too fat" to live in New Zealand

Sunday, July 21, 2013

New Zealand quake hits parliament


Crack in road at Wellington wharf, New Zealand, 21 July 2013The quake cracked roads and knocked stock off shelves in shops


A minute-long earthquake has shaken New Zealand, halting trains and damaging Wellington’s parliament building.


The 6.5-magnitude tremor was centred 35 miles (57 km) off the coast south of the capital at a depth of 6.3 miles, said the US Geological Survey.


But while some structural damage and power cuts were reported, officials said there was no risk of a tsunami.


The quake hit at 17:09 (05:09 GMT) and was felt as far north as Auckland.


It smashed windows, knocked stock off shop shelves and burst some water pipes, but there have been no reports of serious casualties.


Wellington resident James Barwell said the earthquake had caused power cuts in the city suburbs and prompted the temporary closure of its airport.


“There’s been a bit of structural damage, lots of shattered glass everywhere,” he told the BBC. “Initially there were a few screams and panic, people thought it was another Christchurch.”


A 6.3-magnitude earthquake centred near Christchurch in February 2011 killed 185 people.


Sunday’s tremor was the latest in a series that have shaken the lower half of New Zealand’s North Island in recent days.


New Zealand lies on the notorious Ring of Fire, the line of frequent quakes and volcanic eruptions that circles virtually the entire Pacific rim.


The country experiences more than 14,000 earthquakes a year, of which only around 20 have a magnitude in excess of 5.0.


Ring of fire


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BBC News – Asia



New Zealand quake hits parliament