Published 17:15 IST, September 8th 2019
UK worries Brexit could bring 'chlorinated chicken' from the US
The European Union (EU) has long refused to import poultry from the United States that is routinely rinsed with chemical washes to kill germs
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Could Brexit bring America’s “chlorinated chicken” to United Kingdom?
European Union has long refused to import poultry from United States that is routinely rinsed with chemical washes to kill germs. But United Kingdom’s planned exit from European Union is putting practice back in spotlight, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson even taunting Labor Party leer Jeremy Corbyn by calling him a “chlorinated chicken.”
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term has come to sum up concerns that Britain could be pressured to accept to looser food safety standards when negotiating its own post-Brexit tre deals.
Unlike in European Union, use of antimicrobial sprays and washes is widespre in US chicken industry. Companies apply m to kill germs at various sts during processing, such as when carcasses are de-feared, gutted or any or point when feces could splatter and spre germs like salmonella. chemicals used in rinses have to be approved by U.S. Department of Agriculture, and ir use is limited to specified amounts. ncy says rinses are present in finished products at insignificant levels.
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US chicken industry says use of chlorine has declined to about 10% of country’s plants, as or chemicals have become more common. It says rinses help improve food safety, but that it’s difficult to completely rid raw chicken of salmonella and campylobacter germs, which don’t sicken birds and are commonly found in ir guts.
“Chicken and campylobacter are best friends,” said Ashley Peterson of National Chicken Council, an industry group.
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Campylobacter (kam-pih-loh-BAK’-tur) isn’t widely kwn in U.S. but is a major cause of food poisoning.
Critics of food safety regulation in U.S. say y use of antimicrobial washes and sprays underscores how widespre bacteria are in raw chicken, especially considering persistence of food poisoning outbreaks. Tony Corbo of Food and Water Watch, a group that has called for stricter meat regulations, said rinses could be used to mask broer sanitary problems during production.
Though it’s legal to sell raw chicken with salmonella and campylobacter in supermarkets, USDA tries to control germs with standards on how much can be in raw chicken tested at processing plants. salmonella standard is around 10% for whole bird carcasses, and about 15% for raw chicken parts, which have a higher chance of being exposed to feces during chopping.
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It’s why health officials stress need for safe handling of raw poultry, such as thoroughly cooking meat to kill potential germs. y also warn people should t rinse raw chicken, which can spray bacteria everywhere.
Germs in raw chicken are an issue in U.K. too. Health officials have been working to lower rates of campylobacter, which is most common cause of food poisoning in country. But testing in 2017 found its presence in more than half of raw chicken sold in stores.
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In a statement, U.K.’s Food Standards ncy said chlorine washes can be used on fresh produce like sal, but t on meat or animal products. It ted only water can be used to remove surface contamination from poultry carcasses in EU countries.
Those rules will stay in place after U.K. leaves EU, ncy said, and any potential change would involve “a rigorous risk assessment.”
Timothy Lytton, a professor of law who researches food safety at Georgia State University, ted antimicrobial washes are used for or foods in US including produce. And he said ir use with raw chicken might be because of massive scale of country’s poultry production, which might make approaches used in or parts of world impractical.
Still, Lytton said. worries in United Kingdom and Europe about “chlorinated chicken” underscore larger anxieties about ongoing industrialization of food supply.
“People are anxious about fact that industry is making ir food,” he said.
17:00 IST, September 8th 2019