The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection
and Quarantine told a press conference yesterday that PVC food
wrappers containing DEHA (di [z-ethylhexyl] adipate), currently
used in some supermarkets, have been banned nationwide due to
unspecified health concerns.
DEHA is a plasticizer used to make PVC wrappers more pliable and
was not among a list of 65 kinds of plasticizer banned two years
ago.
The administration advised consumers to buy plastic food
wrappers made of polyethylene, which it said was safe, or PVC
wrappers that contain no DEHA.
Liu Zhaobin, spokesperson for the administration, said DEHA
could harm human health when it is used to pack fatty food or
heated in a microwave.
The administration said it would strengthen inspection of the
plastic food wrapper industry, and manufacturers using DEHA in PVC
wrappers would be severely penalized.
Ji Zhengkun, director of the administration's department of
quality inspection, said "producers found using DEHA in food
wrappers will be closed down immediately and ordered to recall all
their products."
The administration said it would ban the import and export of
PVC wrappers that fail to meet the new standard, and Ji said PVC
food wrappers would “soon” be added to the Customs mandatory
inspection list.
Supermarkets and shops were instructed to withdraw all plastic
food wrappers without labels indicating the material they are made
of; and whether they are safe for microwave use.
Ji advised consumers to check labels carefully before buying
food wrappers, and that PVC wrappers, even without DEHA, should not
use it to wrap meat, cooked or fatty food, or in microwave
ovens.
Of 44 brands of Chinese PVC food wrappers surveyed by the
administration, it said “almost all” met safety standards.
There are 47 producers of plastic food wrappers on the mainland,
of which six use PVC. The domestic market accounts for 90 percent
of their products while the remaining 10 percent are exported.
(China Daily October 26, 2005)