Subject: Liquor firm denies claim its drinks are tainted
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atomic3d
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Post at 20-11-2012 14:38  Profile P.M. 
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Liquor firm denies claim its drinks are tainted

By Xu Chi  |   2012-11-20  |

A LIQUOR company is disputing the findings of a testing company in Shanghai that its products contain excessive and toxic plasticizers which could impair male sexual function and even cause liver cancer.



According to a report on news website 21cbn.com, Jiugui, a type of Chinese liquor selling for 438 yuan (US$70) a bottle, was found to contain three plasticizers with one being 260 percent above the permitted level.



There have been reports of plasticizers being illegally added to drinks to improve their appearance and taste. But they can be hazardous to health.



The website said its reporter, after a tip-off from "insiders," had purchased four bottles of Jiugui from an official store in Beijing and sent them to the National Food Quality Supervision and Inspection Center for checks. 



But after the center refused to check the liquor saying that it would require authorization from the production company, the reporter sent them to a third-party company, Intertek Co, to be tested. Its tests showed that samples of the liquor contained three plasticizers - diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), diisobutyl phthalate (DIBP) and dibutyl phthalate (DBP), the website said. 



The DBP was 260 percent above the level allowed in the country, the website said.



It quoted experts as saying long-term intake of food or drink with plasticizers disrupted hormone levels and could also damage the immune and digestive systems and even cause liver cancer.



However, liquor producer Hunan Jiugui Liquor Co in central China's Hunan Province disputed the findings and said they would not be recalling products. 



It told NetEase website money.163.com that the Intertek company was not authoritative.



The website said the company had previously sent products to the country's quality supervision facility for checks but no plasticizers had been found. 



Jiugui Vice President Fan Zhen told China National Radio he had been confused by the media reports. Fan said the company used traditional methods and didn't add plasticizer during the production process. 



He also said there was no national standard for plasticizers in liquor but confirmed that the company would be sending their products to an official facility for checks. 



Experts say any chemicals in the drink may have come from plastic products, such as conduits or containers, that are used in the distilling process.

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/nsp ... ks%2Bare%2Btainted/

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Weelock   20-11-2012 19:40  Acceptance  +4   Favorable
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Post at 20-11-2012 19:57  Profile P.M. 
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Some of the brand name beer are fake.  The bottles has been recycled and refilled.  

It can be said the same for the high end stuff as well.

QUOTE:
Counterfeit High- End Wines in China


David Pierson wrote in Los Angeles Times, “The lamb chops were cooked to perfection. Fine wines flowed. Then came the piece de resistance: a 1997 Chateau Petrus Pomerol that can fetch about $2,000 a bottle.Wine consultant Frankie Zhao was dining with a group of well-to-do Chinese businessmen at an exclusive private club in the capital. Their host was eager to share — and show off — the prized French Merlot. But after the first sip, veteran taster Zhao knew the collector had been duped. "I could tell immediately it was a fake," said Zhao, who kept silent rather than embarrass his unwitting friend. "It was too fresh and soft and didn't have any complexity." [Source: David Pierson, Los Angeles Times, January 14, 2011]

Seizing on exploding demand, China's ever-resourceful knock-off artists have uncorked a lucrative new business: phony high-end wines. Bootleggers are dousing the market with fakes, refilling empty bottles from famous chateaux with inferior vintages. The problem is so widespread that auction house Christie's concludes its tasting events in Hong Kong and China by smashing empties with a hammer, lest the glass containers end up on the black market."We have to protect provenance," said Simon Tam, head of wine in China for Christie's. "Even if you scrape off the label, there are still channels for the bottles to be misused. It's really about being responsible."

High prices for premium wines have proved irresistible for counterfeiters. Knock-off hooch can be found almost anywhere in the world alcohol is sold, but China is fast becoming the market of choice for pirates. "China's where the big-money wine boom has moved," said Benjamin Wallace, author of "The Billionaire's Vinegar," which delves into the underworld of wine forgery.

At a wholesale alcohol market in the northern Beijing suburb of Huilongguan, buyers can easily find sellers of purported Chateau Lafite Rothschild. The real deal can cost $8,000 a bottle, but even fakes aren't cheap. "A good one can cost [$160] because they use an original bottle," said a storekeeper who gave only his surname, Zhou. Indeed, a cottage industry of bottle scavengers has sprung up to serve the trade. One broker solicits online as a "professional bottle recycler," offering up to $320 for an empty Lafite bottle, depending on the vintage.

Copycat producers benefit from the relatively undeveloped palates of many local consumers. For some businesspeople and government officials, the value of sharing a Lafite lies in how much face it bestows, not how well it pairs with a meal. "It's an immature market," said Zhao, the consultant. "The first thing people care about is the label on the bottle, not the taste of the wine."



Counterfeit High- End Wine Production and Marketing in China


David Pierson wrote in Los Angeles Times, “Though Chinese authorities condemn the trade in spurious wine, enforcement has been episodic at best. Investigators reportedly cracked down on widespread illegal production in Changli, a wine-growing region east of Beijing, but only after state television broadcast an expose in late 2010. A reporter found legitimate winemakers producing counterfeits on the side using a concoction of "citric acid, sodium citrate, tanning, flavoring essence, and coloring." The crudely made beverage was being sold with both Chinese and foreign labels, including Lafite, and appeared to be aimed at inexperienced consumers. [Source: David Pierson, Los Angeles Times, January 14, 2011]

The most common form of deception consists of tweaking a label ever so slightly to trick consumers into thinking they're buying a name brand. Makers of these impostors sell in the open at wine exhibitions, renting booths alongside the legitimate competition. Ian Ford, managing partner of wine importer Summergate Fine Wines, snapped photos of some of the most brazen doppelgangers last year at the Chengdu Wine Fair in western China, one of the industry's most important events. There he found a "Benfolds," which sported a label in red cursive almost identical to "Penfolds," the name and logo of one of Australia's oldest wineries.

Then there was the "Barons de Lafite cellar collection" sold by a company named Wenzhou Oldenburg Lafite Export & Import Ltd. in the eastern city of Wenzhou. The label is an almost exact replica of the iconic Lafite Rothschild logo with its five arrows. "We always explain to customers we're not the original Lafite," said a company salesperson who would only give her last name as He. "This is our own brand."

Ford said the copycats are just one component in a crowded landscape that makes China's wine industry distinctly chaotic. Thousands of fly-by-night distributors and producers are vying for a foothold in the rapidly expanding market. "There's a little bit of gold rush mentality with imported wine right now," Ford said.

http://factsanddetails.com/china ... =11&subcatid=73

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atomic3d   20-11-2012 21:19  Acceptance  +4   Domestic beer only, too cheap to copy
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Post at 21-11-2012 00:50  Profile P.M. 
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Fake wine or beer can be found easily in China. If the producer recall its product too easy, it may always make losses.
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Post at 29-11-2012 11:36  Profile P.M. 
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Scandal-hit liquor maker halts packaging lines

Initial investigations indicated that liquor produced by Jiugui Liquor Co Ltd might be contaminated with plasticizer during the packaging process -- from plastic tubes and corks, according to Xia Xinguo, general manager of the firm.
http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/bus ... ontent_15965959.htm
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Post at 11-12-2012 10:36  Profile P.M. 
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Chinese liquor maker Moutai rebuts contamination accusation

BEIJING, Dec. 10 (Xinhua) -- Leading Chinese white-spirits maker Kweichow Moutai Co. on Monday cited positive test results from three quality inspection institutions after trading of its stocks was suspended over contamination rumors the same day.

In its statement filed to the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the Guizhou-based firm attached reports from the state quality inspection authority and a provincial authority at its place of origin, both dated August this year, along with a third report dated December by the Shanghai-based Intertek to counter recent additive accusations.

All reports showed samples of its products did not contain excessive levels of plasticizer and conformed to national standards.

In the statement, Moutai also posted photographs of its production and operating sites and labs, while inviting on-the-spot investigation from consumers, investors and all levels of quality inspection authorities.

Moutai's statement came after a netizen named "Shui Jing Huang" claimed last week in his personal blog that a sample of the company's liquor had been found to contain toxic levels of plasticizer.

The alleged Hong Kong investor posted pictures of the test report on Sunday night, causing Moutai's emergency trading suspension.

Buoyed by the market's overall warming performance, trading of other Chinese alcohol producers picked up on Monday after the sector suffered great losses following a scandal which began in late November over products found to be tainted with plasticizer.

Jiugui Liquor Co., the first company embroiled in the affair, saw its stocks rise by nearly 6 percent by Monday's close.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/englis ... /10/c_132031959.htm
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