. Earth Science News .
Under Mao and Deng, milk was unknown in China

Despite a widespread lactose intolerance in China, milk sales increased by 128 percent over the past five years, and those of powdered baby milk rose 185 percent, according to Euromonitor International. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 28, 2008
The toxic milk scandal in China could never have happened under Mao Zedong or Deng Xiaoping, as dairy products only landed on Chinese dinner tables when the nation began opening up to the outside world.

Westerners visiting China 20 or 30 years ago were hard pressed to find dairy products, and were only able to drink yoghurt out of a straw from a stone pot carved with Chinese characters, still available in the country.

But in the past few years, supermarket shelves have filled up with powdered or traditional milk, yoghurts and milk drinks, in countless cartons and cans, along with all sorts of flavours.

The average Chinese person, who drank 1.2 kilogrammes (2.6 pounds) of milk a year in 1980 when Deng -- the architect of China's reforms -- was in power, guzzled 26.7 kilos last year, according to the national bureau of statistics.

This, however, is still 10 times less than what people in developed countries consume.

"Milk has certainly substituted some of the traditional drinks, such as porridge, soybean milk and noodle soup," said You Xiuzhen, a retired woman shopping at the Wonderful Supermarket in Beijing.

In the early 1980s, Chinese people in big cities were the first to begin buying dairy products, and purchasing a litre of milk was almost a sign of wealth or extravagance.

Then followed an aggressive marketing drive from big milk brands, including the three market leaders involved in the contamination scandal, featuring young sports or film stars looking radiantly healthy from drinking milk.

"Thirty years ago, adults would not drink milk because we did not have the extra money for something that was not deemed necessary," said Li Jinxia, another retired woman in Beijing.

"We now drink it because it is convenient and, as the ads say, it can supplement calcium and protein and is easily digested."

Despite a widespread lactose intolerance in China, milk sales increased by 128 percent over the past five years, and those of powdered baby milk rose 185 percent, according to Euromonitor International.

"The fastest growth was during 2002 and 2004, with annual growth of more than 20 percent," said Yang Fan, an economist at the market research company, in Shanghai.

"The dairy industry has been growing unusually fast in China with government support -- China's growth model is unique."

In 2006, China's Prime Minister Wen Jiabao declared: "I have a dream that every Chinese, first of all children, can afford to drink one kilogramme of milk every day."

Then, Mengniu, one of the industry's heavyweights currently under the spotlight, launched a campaign donating milk in rural areas with the help of government agencies.

It used the slogan: "A litre of milk a day makes the Chinese people stronger."

After decades of communist isolation, China's opening to the outside world also helped drive dairy product consumption.

"The mass media is exposing many of China's households to foreign ideas, products and lifestyles without citizens having to travel abroad," a 2005 study on Chinese dairy products by Iowa State University said.

As for powdered milk, which has killed four children in China during the current scandal, advertising campaigns on the health benefits proved extremely effective.

In Shanghai, 50 percent of women now feed their babies with powdered milk -- Chinese kids are not consuming rice soup or soya porridge anymore and often have powdered milk well beyond their first birthday.

Meanwhile, in towns and cities, modern, urban women see powdered milk as a way to get their figure back fast after giving birth, indicating the current crisis is unlikely to dent China's new-found enthusiasm for dairy products.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


France relaunches stormy debate on EU fishing quotas
Brussels (AFP) Sept 28, 2008
The EU's French presidency will on Monday call for a complete rethink of the bloc's controversial fishing quota system, a prospect raising concerns among environmentalists and Brussels officials alike.







  • Dominican Republic Strengthens Early Warning System For Flood Inundations
  • Two dead, 14 missing in Philippines mine: officials
  • Hope fades for trapped miners, death toll rises in Philippines typhoon
  • Invest in disaster preparations to protect Asia's poor: World Vision

  • Emissions Rising Faster This Decade Than Last
  • China biggest carbon polluter, world levels at record: scientists
  • Britain pledges 50 million dollars for drought-hit Ethiopia
  • Researchers Find Animal With Ability To Survive Climate Change

  • Infoterra Adds High Resolution City Datasets
  • NRL HICO-RAIDS Experiments Ready For Payload Integration
  • Raytheon Completes Ground Segment Acceptance Testing For NPOESS
  • NASA Selects Contractor For Landsat Data Continuity Mission Spacecraft

  • Georgia's Oglethorpe Power Launches Large Biomass Initiative
  • Study Of Smart Energy Homes
  • Canada pledges environmental restrictions on oil exports
  • New EU law demands more battery recycling

  • Toll rises to 121 in Uganda hepatitis epidemic
  • Sharp unveils new anti-bird flu air purifier
  • HIV-positive Swazi women march against royals' shopping binge
  • Matsushita says new DNA technology identifies disease risks

  • Explorers Find Hundreds of Undescribed Corals On Familiar Australian Reefs
  • America's Smallest Dinosaur Uncovered
  • Formula Discovered For Longer Plant Life
  • Primordial Fish Had Rudimentary Fingers

  • Beijing announces steps to fight smog, traffic
  • Chemical Equator Splits Northern From Southern Air Pollution
  • Estrogen Flooding Our Rivers
  • Marine Debris Will Likely Worsen In The 21st Century

  • To Queue Or Not To Queue
  • Computers figuring out what words mean
  • The Satellite Navigation In Our Brains
  • A Tiny Ancestral Remnant Lends Developmental Edge To Humans

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement