Toxic fish found
in Europe as Mad Cow panic spreads.
Scientists call for changes in acceptable levels of
dioxin for human consumption
by Marlise Simons,
New York Times
Dec. 18
Just as worried Europeans are turning their
backs on beef and flocking to the fish
counter, there is more bad news about dinner: scientists have warned that they
have found unacceptably high levels of toxic
industrial chemicals in the region's seafood.
Experts from the Scientific Committee for Food,
in a report prepared for the European
Union, said
fish both from farms and from the region's seas
are regularly contaminated by dioxins and
similar toxins.
Fish oil and fish meal have the highest
levels of these chemicals, the panel said.
Dioxins, which
are produced as a waste product by
industrial plants and waste incineration,
have been linked to hormone changes, cancer
in animals and other severe disorders.
The scientists also called for changes in the
levels of dioxin considered acceptable for
human
consumption.
"Nobody is saying we can't eat fish anymore,
but consumers must be made aware that fish
contributes significantly to the intake of
dioxins," said Johan Reyniers, a
European Union spokesman. This is
particularly true, he said, for fish from the more polluted
areas like the North
Sea and the Baltic around Scandinavia.
The warning about fish comes as Europeans are
already panicking about the spread of mad
cow
disease, and the consumption of beef is dropping
drastically.
While they have not suspended the use of fish oil
or fish meal, European officials said that
early
next year, when the governments debate the new
dioxin findings, the findings are likely
to produce more pressure to reduce
pollutants as fast as possible.
According to the new report, fish meal and fish
oils of European origin have dioxin levels
up to
eight times as high as similar products from
nonindustrial regions, like the waters off
Peru and
Chile. The fish meal and fish oil also contain up
to 10 times more dioxin than is found in
meat
and eggs.
This is troubling because the fish meal is used in
the diets of farmed fish and other food
animals
like chickens and pigs.
If stricter limits for dioxins are set next year,
related legislation is expected to provoke
opposition
from the strong fishery lobbies in North European
countries, which have a sizable fish-meal
industry. Europe produces 500,000 tons of fish
meal a year.
Solutions may include removing the dioxins from
the fish meal or replacing the feed with
soy
meal. Users argue that soy meal is a less
effective feed because of its lower protein
content.
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