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Milk powder in a Shanghai supermarket/AFP

Focus on China

Dutch order probe into baby milk sales to China

Milk powder in a Shanghai supermarket/AFP

Milk powder in a Shanghai supermarket/AFP

THE HAGUE, May 9 – The Dutch government on Wednesday ordered an investigation into persistent shortages of certain brands of baby formula, blamed on networks of traffickers who ship milk powder to China where it is sold at premium prices.

Deputy Economic Affairs Minister Sharon Dijksma ordered the Dutch Food and Consumer watchdog to probe a huge rise in demand for baby formula linked to so-called “baby milk runners”, who bulk-buy powder in shops before sending it to China where it is resold to young parents fearful of local products.

“I want to gather information… over the bulk buying and trade in the Netherlands in order to inform Chinese authorities that they are getting batches of milk powder that do not confirm to their regulations,” Dijksma said in the statement.

There is growing concern in the Netherlands, one of Europe’s leading diary producers, about a looming national shortage of infant formula, with local papers quoting shoppers saying at least two popular brands were almost impossible to find on shop shelves.

“Dutch consumers can still find baby formula, but it’s getting harder-and-harder,” Dutch Food Industry Federation (FNLI) director Philip den Ouden told AFP.

The FNLI and food retail representatives met on Monday to discuss the growing concern over shortages, saying a measure to merely restrict the number of tins of formula per customer was not enough.

The FNLI and Dutch Food Retail Association (CBL) in a combined statement afterwards stressed however that despite concerns “the availability of infant formula in the Netherlands is not in danger.”

Alarm bells over infant formula went off earlier this year when retailers saw a 50 percent spike in sales figures from the last quarter of 2012, said Den Ouden.

“This was strange because the number of births in the Netherlands did not go up,” he said.

An initial probe showed growing demand in China, largely driven by the memories of a 2008 scandal over Chinese formula tainted with the industrial chemical melamine, which left six children dead and affected more than 300,000 others.

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Some Dutch citizens have now turned Chinese demand into a business opportunity and are making serious money in the process, Dutch newspapers reported this week.

Chinese websites charge hefty mark-ups, sometimes approaching 100 percent, on the retail price.

Shipping fees can double those prices again, while customs checks and import duties in China can add another 30 percent, according to Chinese reports.

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