Honey Laundering
Air Date: Week of August 14, 2009
(Photo: Scott Bauer, USDA/ARS)
The tale of honey is not all sweet. In an eight part investigative series in The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, reporter Andrew Schneider looks at the origins of imported honey and the lack of oversight by federal agencies. Schneider tells host Bruce Gellerman that Chinese honey makes up about a third of honey consumed in the U.S. and, he says, some of it is watered down with corn syrup and contains antibiotics illegal here.
Transcript
GELLERMAN: From the Jennifer and Ted Stanley Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, this is an encore presentation of Living on Earth. I’m Bruce Gellerman. Americans have a sweet tooth for honey. We eat over a pound of honey per person a year. Honey is healthy and the stuff of sweet dreams - a major ingredient for Winnie the Pooh bedtime stories.
But just as Pooh got stuck digging deep into a honey pot, last spring West Coast importers got stung when a federal SWAT team swooped down and busted them for honey trafficking.
Andrew Schneider was a senior correspondent for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer when he investigated honey imports. And his eight part series read more like James Bond than Pooh Bear.
SCHNEIDER: We have a problem in this country – we only make about a third of the 450 million pounds of honey that we consume. The rest comes in across our borders. It's called trans-shipping
GELLERMAN: So we're consuming a lot. And a lot of that, you write, comes from China. I guess about half of the remaining imports.
SCHNEIDER: Yeah, that's pretty much what we figured out. They're most often marked as coming from other countries: Vietnam, Korea, India, Australia. But in most cases they are from China, and just illegally relabeled.
GELLERMAN: You have a great turn of a phrase – you call it honey laundering. And I guess the honey that we get from China is supposed to have a tariff. So what these companies do is they send it off to another country and label it coming from that country when it's really coming from China.
SCHNEIDER: Right, you've defined honey laundering very well, Bruce. They avoid the tariffs by shipping it to a country that has no tariffs. And they also avoid the added scrutiny that's often applied to Chinese honey, because Chinese honey has been found to be contaminated over the years with antibiotics that the FDA declares illegal.
GELLERMAN: When honey enters the United States from China or from anyplace else, isn't it tested for safety?
SCHNEIDER: It depends who you ask. The closer that we got to the headquarters of FDA and the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Agency, the more people were insisting that they inspect every shipment of honey.
GELLERMAN: Well what about the importers, the companies that actually, you know, purchase the honey in volume and then sell it over here. Don't they test their own products?
SCHNEIDER: Not so much. Rarely, actually. One of the things that's really gotta be understood is regardless of how sinister or criminal the Chinese honey shippers may be, they couldn't get their honey into this country unless there were people here that were willing to close their eyes and make believe that it's not from China. I mean, it's pretty obvious. The going price for good honey, from Canada, for example, might be a buck sixty a pound. Australian honey might be a buck forty a pound. If all of a sudden, as a honey packer, you're being offered three hundred thousand pounds of honey at fifty cents a pound, wouldn't you think you might wonder a bit about why you're getting such a great price?
GELLERMAN: Well we've been talking about honey, and one of the things you write about in your article is that actually, there is no legal definition of what honey is in this country.
SCHNEIDER: That's correct. Neither the FDA nor the USDA has a legal definition of honey. Which means that enforcing the quality of honey becomes extremely difficult and problematic.
GELLERMAN: What about the labeling where it says organic?
SCHNEIDER: Well, if it says “made in the U.S. organic honey,” the chances are almost totally that they are wrong. Mainly because you can't control where the bees fly. Now that doesn't mean there isn't organic honey.
There are parts of South America that are totally undeveloped. There are parts of Northern Canada that have no commercial farming whatsoever, and there is organic honey coming from those places, but if it says made in the U.S.A. organic, I'd be very suspicious of it.
GELLERMAN: Do you like honey?
SCHNEIDER: I liked it a lot more before I started researching this story.
GELLERMAN: Investigative reporter Andrew Schneider's eight part series about imported honey appeared in the Seattle Post Intelligencer. We contacted Martin Stutsman of the Food and Drug Administration and he confirmed the government does test only about 100 barrels of imported honey a year.
STUTSMAN: Honey is a low-risk commodity. We don't have a lot of problems with honey.
GELLERMAN: Why is there no legal definition of honey? I understand that you can actually put sugar water or fructose in a plastic bear and call it honey because there is no regulation.
STUTSMAN: We don't have a regulation specifying what honey is. But honey is commonly understood to be the material produced by bees from nectar of flowers and deposited and dehydrated by the bees in the honeycomb.
GELLERMAN: And Martin Stutsman says the FDA has and does cite packagers who mix fructose with honey.
Links
To read Andrew Schneider’s 8 part series on honey, click here.
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