CHINA’S food supply appears to be awash in the industrial chemical melamine. 
Dangerous levels have been detected not only in milk and eggs, but also in 
chicken feed and wheat gluten, meaning that melamine is almost impossible to 
avoid in processed foods. Melamine in baby formula has killed at least four 
infants in China and sickened tens of thousands more

In response, the United States has blasted lax Chinese regulations, while the 
Food and Drug Administration, in a rare move, announced last week that Chinese 
food products containing milk would be detained at the border until they were 
proved safe.

For all the outrage about Chinese melamine, what American consumers and 
government agencies have studiously failed to scrutinize is how much melamine 
has pervaded our own food system. In casting stones, we’ve forgotten that our 
own house has more than its share of exposed glass. 

To be sure, in China some food manufacturers deliberately added melamine to 
products to increase profits. Makers of baby formula, for example, watered down 
their product, lowering the amount of protein and nutrients, then added 
melamine, which is cheap and fools tests measuring protein levels. 

But melamine is also integral to the material life of any industrialized 
society. It’s a common ingredient in cleaning products, waterproof plywood, 
plastic compounds, cement, ink and fire-retardant paint. Chemical plants 
throughout the United States produce millions of pounds of melamine a year. 

Given the pervasiveness of melamine, it’s always possible that trace elements 
will end up in food. The F.D.A. thus sets the legal limit for melamine in food 
at 2.5 parts per million. This amount is indeed miniuscule, a couple of sand 
grains in an expanse of desert that pose no real threat to public health. 
Moreover, the 2.5 p.p.m. figure is calculated for a person weighing 132 pounds 
— a cautious benchmark given that the average adult weighs 150 to 180 pounds.  

But these figures obscure more than they reveal. First, while adults eat about 
one-fortieth of their weight every day, toddlers consume closer to one-tenth. 
Although scientists haven’t measured the differential impact of melamine on 
infants versus adults, it’s likely that this intensified ratio would at least 
double (if not quadruple) the impact of legal levels of melamine on toddlers.

This doubled exposure might not land a child in the hospital, but it could 
certainly contribute to the long-term kidney and liver problems that we know 
are caused by chronic exposure to melamine. 

On a more concrete note, melamine not only has widespread industrial 
applications, but is also used to buttress the foundation of American 
agriculture.

Fertilizer companies commonly add melamine to their products because it helps 
control the rate at which nitrogen seeps into soil, thereby allowing the farmer 
to get more nutrient bang for the fertilizer buck. But the government doesn’t 
regulate how much melamine is applied to the soil. This melamine accumulates as 
salt crystals in the ground, tainting the soil through which American food 
sucks up American nutrients. 

A related area of agricultural concern is animal feed. Chinese eggs seized last 
month in Hong Kong , for instance, contained elevated levels of melamine 
because of the melamine-laden wheat gluten used in the feed for the chickens 
that produced the eggs. 

To think American consumers are immune to this unscrupulous behavior is to 
ignore the Byzantine reality of the global gluten trade. Tracking the flow of 
wheat gluten around the world, much less evaluating its quality, is like trying 
to contain a drop of dye in a churning whirlpool.

More ominous, the United States imports most of its wheat gluten. Last year, 
for instance, the F.D.A. reported that millions of Americans had eaten chicken 
fattened on feed with melamine-tainted gluten imported from China . Around the 
same time, Tyson Foods slaughtered and processed hogs that had eaten 
melamine-contaminated feed. The government decided not to recall the meat.  

Only a week earlier, however, the F.D.A. had announced that thousands of cats 
and dogs had died from melamine-laden pet food. This high-profile pet scandal 
did not prove to be a spur to reform so much as a red herring. Our attention 
was diverted to Fido and away from the animals we happen to kill and eat rather 
than spoil.

Frightening as this all sounds, the concerned consumer is not completely 
helpless. We can seek out organic foods, which are grown with fertilizer 
without melamine — unless that fertilizer was composted with manure from 
animals fed melamine-laden feed (always possible, as the Tyson example 
suggests). 

We could further protect ourselves by choosing meat from grass-fed or truly 
free-range animals, assuming the grass was not fertilized with a conventional 
product (something that’s also very hard to know).

But as all the caveats above indicate, these precautions will only go so far. 
Melamine, after all, points to the much larger relationship between industrial 
waste and American food production. Regulations might be lax when it comes to 
animal feed and fertilizer in China, but take a closer look at similar 
regulations in the United States and it becomes clear that they’re vague enough 
to allow industries to “recycle” much of their waste into fertilizer and other 
products that form the basis of our domestic food supply.

As a result, toxic chemicals routinely enter our agricultural system through 
the back channels of this under-explored but insidious relationship. 

So, sure, let’s keep the heat on China . And, yes, let’s take with a big dose 
of skepticism the Chinese government’s assurances that they’re improving the 
food supply. 

At the same time, though, instead of delivering righteous condemnation, the 
United States should seize upon the melamine scandal as an opportunity to pass 
federal fertilizer standards backed by consistent testing for this compound, 
which could very well be hidden in plain sight.

James E. McWilliams, a history professor at Texas State University at San 
Marcos , is the author of “American Pests: The Losing War on Insects from 
Colonial Times to DDT.” 


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