Home>News Center>China
       
 

Teflon-coated pans barred from shelves
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2004-07-16 01:28

Following the US government's allegations against chemical giant DuPont, Chinese non-stick cookware producers may see a drop in sales, with customers worrying that Teflon-coated pans may potentially pose health risks.

Beijing SOGO, a large department store, has removed non-stick pans that use DuPont's Teflon coating from shelves after the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) accused DuPont of failing to report potential risks from the synthetic chemical perfluorooctanoic acid used to make Teflon, known as PFOA or C8.

The acid may cause cancer, it says.

Some department stores in southwestern China's Chengdu City and southern China's Guangzhou city have also started removing the cookware from shelves.

Aishida, one of the biggest cookware producers in the country, said it had received many calls from customers concerned about its stick-resistant cooking utensils. Some even asked to cancel their orders.

Chen Yun, Aishida's general manager, said PFOA was used in the process of making Teflon, but the finished product did not contain any. The chemical was vaporized during manufacturing.

China's State Administration of Quality Supervision and Quarantine announced on Wednesday that experts had been organized to test whether the Teflon coating was harmful to human health and the result was expected to be released in September.

They said strict measures would be taken to remove all Teflon- coated cookware from shelves and stop imports of Teflon coating if they were proved to pose health hazards.

Shi Senglan, secretary general of the China Hardware Association, urged local non-sticking cookware businesses to keep in close contact with the US DuPont for any follow-up.

At present, China produces 80 to 100 million Teflon-coated, non- sticking cooking pans per year. Aishida alone earns about 400 million yuan (US$48.3 million) a year, but more than 60 to 70 per cent of their products are sold overseas.

Sources from DuPont's China branch said that its Teflon products posed no health risks to humans and the environment. The company said it would file a formal denial within 30 days to the allegations issued by the EPA.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

China supports to expand UN Security Council properly

 

   
 

FTA to help diversify China's energy sources

 

   
 

Premier warns of economic pitfalls

 

   
 

Warning sounded on possible floods

 

   
 

Most polluted cities in China blacklisted

 

   
 

Home-made explosive kills 16 in Shanxi

 

   
  US says committed to one China, yet sells arms to Taiwan
   
  Home-made explosive kills 16 in Shanxi
   
  Debate erupts over Xiushui demolition
   
  Fuzhou government sued for US$110 million
   
  Cheaper medicines expected for Chinese AIDS patients
   
  Police crack decade-old murder case in Xi'an
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  When will china have direct elections?  
Advertisement