Chinese Honey Laundered in U.S., Seattle Paper Exposes the continued fraud.
Alan Harman
Big shipments of contaminated honey from
A five-month investigation by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer found that in a series of shipments in the past year, tons of honey produced in China passed through the ports of Tacoma and Long Beach, Calif., after being fraudulently marked as a tariff-free product from Russia.
It found other shipments routed through
The report, which mirrors a story in Bee Culture back in 2002, says tens of thousands of pounds of honey entering the
“In the U.S., where bee colonies are dying off and demand for imported honey is soaring, traders of the thick amber liquid are resorting to elaborate schemes to dodge tariffs and health safeguards in order to dump cheap honey on the market,” the newspaper reports.
“The business is plagued by foreign hucksters and shady importers who rip off conscientious
The newspaper cites 350 drums containing 223,300 pounds of Chinese honey that were shipped in August from Hubei Yangzijiang Apiculture Co. in
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“There, according to Indian Customs reports, the honey marked ‘for re-export purposes’ was accepted by Apis India Natural Products,” it says. “The drums still contained instructions from the Chinese company, saying the load was to be shipped to America's biggest and oldest honey cooperative - Iowa-based Sue Bee Honey. Two containers of the honey reportedly were shipped to
The Post Intelligencer says honey laundering is so rampant crackdowns are being pushed in a number of countries, including
“While very little Russian-made honey is exported, according to the Federal Customs Service of Russia, records obtained by the P-I show more than 11 million pounds of honey purportedly originating in
In February, it says, the Australian Supreme Court imposed almost a half-million dollars in fines against two companies that shipped 1.8 million quarts of Chinese honey to the
The Indian Directorate of Revenue Intelligence found that through mid-November last year, 471 out of 665 honey shipments that listed
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The
“Countries that have few if any commercial beekeepers, such as
“And other countries that locally produce mostly dark, strong-tasting honey, such as
“But Vietnamese honey officials say much Chinese honey is being transshipped through their country, citing 24 containers that arrived in Los Angeles earlier this month (December),” the report says.