NZ Honey Comes under Scrutiny in Hong Kong
NZ Honey Comes under Scrutiny in Hong Kong. New
Zealand’s Oldest Brand Says
Tighter Export Controls
Are Needed.
Airborne Honey, New Zealand’s oldest honey
brand, believes the quality
control of New Zealand honey
export needs to be tighter, following recent
feedback
from the Hong Kong Consumer Council. On 16 July, New Zealand
honey
came under scrutiny in Hong Kong after the Hong
Kong Consumer Council, a
statutory body that protects
and promotes consumer rights in Hong Kong,
tested a
number of well-known brands available in the region. The
Consumer
Council reports that a quarter of the 55
samples tested (from a number of
countries, including
New Zealand) have been adulterated with sugar,
including
Manuka.
Overall, fourteen of the 55 samples tested were
adulterated with sugar while
others contained plain
syrup, small quantities of antibiotic residues or
traces
of the anti- parasite drug amitraz. Some samples, including
from New
Zealand, also contained antibiotics or a
pesticide. The findings have led
the council to send
results to the Customs and Excise Department to check
for breaches of the Trade Descriptions
Ordinance.
According to John Smart, Airborne Honey Sales
and Marketing Manager, the
increasing focus on food
quality and food safety in Asia, including Hong
Kong,
should encourage New Zealand honey brands to be as
meticulous as
possible when it comes to quality control
and testing their honey batches
for authenticity and
damage.
“Testing for quality, heat damage and
authenticity has been a part of the
Airborne Honey
culture for decades and it is certainly paying off. It is
vital as our customers, including those in Asia, are
becoming much more
discerning about safety and knowing
exactly where their food comes from and
how it was
made,” says John.
Some honey producers have reacted to
the results from the Hong Kong Consumer
Council by
claiming that the testing methods used are out of date and
returning inaccurate data.
“All Airborne Honey
Manuka honey is tested using the internationally applied
AOAC Method 998.12 -1 to determine the presence of C4
(corn syrup or cane
sugars). However, it has been
discovered that this method may falsely
indicate the
presence of C4 sugars in certain honey, such as New Zealand
Manuka, and is currently being modified to recognise the
different C3 sugar
(nectar sugars) profile that a number
of New Zealand honey varieties
exhibit,” explains
John.
On top of the AOAC testing, each Airborne Honey
batch is tested both when it
arrives at the Christchurch
factory from the beekeeper and when it leaves as
a
retail pack to be delivered to the retailer or distributor.
Airborne Honey
now makes these test results visible to
consumers both in Asia and New
Zealand through their
Honest, Undamaged, and Traceable (HUT) honey jar
labels.
The honey is fully traceable, with each Airborne Honey jar
stamped
with a batch number, along with the HMF and
pollen percentage figure,
meaning it can be traced back
to the original hive.
“Our labels enable our customers
to verify the quality and origin of the
honey they are
buying,” says John. “Honest identifies the pollen
content,
the higher the number the better. Undamaged
demonstrates the honey has not
been heat damaged (as low
a HMF number as possible is desirable) and
Traceable
means every batch can be tracked all the way back to the
beehive.”
Airborne Honey is the only company in New
Zealand with its own in-house
laboratory, which has been
operating from the mid 1980s, which measures
samples
from every batch of honey that comes in and goes out, and
has a
comparative database containing more than 31,000
records. Every beekeeper’s
honey is tested before
purchase to identify pollen count, honey colour,
conductivity and sugars. This assures Airborne that it
is good quality and
true to its varietal type.
Further
details on Airborne Honey can be found at www.airborne.co.nz
-Ends-