
Aquaculture is the farming of sea creatures for
human consumption. It is done in ponds and adjacent to the
sea. Shrimp aquaculture has expanded the fastest over the past
two decades in Asia and Latin America. It tops the list of
favourite sea food. It is important that you know the
consequences of eating farmed shrimp.
By the time a shrimp arrives in the market, it
has been injected with antibiotics, doused in pesticides, and
fed chemical-laden food.
Shrimp farms are often dirty, overstocked ponds.
Most shrimp get sick with viral and bacterial infections
such as the White Spot Syndrome Virus, which causes high
mortality rates throughout Asia . In order to keep them alive
till they are sold ,a range of antibiotics are used in shrimp
farms. Chemicals used in aquaculture ponds to control
infections are algaecides, pesticides, disinfectant and
detergents . I am not going to talk about the staggering amount
of pesticides, dioxins,organochlorines each shrimp has in
its small body. This article is only about one antibiotic – of
the more than 21 – used by the shrimp industry.
The shrimp producing countries are Indonesia ,
Bangladesh, China, India, the Philippines, Taiwan and some Latin
American countries. India is the second largest producer of
shrimp. For decades, diseases have devastated the shrimp
industry. Shrimp farmers turn to the atom bomb of all
antibiotics - chloramphenicol
Chloramphenicol is considered to be a drug of
last resort for humans, usually administered only in
life-threatening situations when less potent antibiotics are
ineffective (e.g., in the treatment of salmonella, anthrax, and
typhoid). However chloramphenicol has been evaluated by
the Joint FAO/World Health Organisation Expert Committee on Food
Additives. That committee concluded that the compound can
cause genetic damage, cancer specially leukemia and a fatal
human disease called "aplastic anemia," in which bone marrow
stops producing red and white blood cells. The onset
may occur weeks or months after treatment with chloramphenicol
has been discontinued. The frequency of the disease is greatest
in Asia.
The FAO has warned that a very low
concentrations of chloramphenicol could be enough to trigger the
fatal illness. Even amounts such as 3 parts per billion could
trigger it off. Research consistently shows that any
concentration of chloramphenicol is potentially lethal for
humans and , it has not been possible to identify a safe level
of human exposure to it. Governments around the world have
established zero tolerance policies, which means no residues in
food , food producing animals or feed products are permissible
In 2001 EU food authorities detected
unacceptable levels of chloramphenicol in imported shrimp from
China, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand and India and moved swiftly
to ban any shrimp that tested positive. Consequently, each
consignment of shrimp from China, India, Pakistan and Southeast
Asian producers sent to the EU was subjected to strict testing
to ensure there were no traces of chloramphenicol
contaminant. Canada, Japan and the US moved to similar bans. In
2002, EU inspectors ordered the destruction of three large
consignments of shrimp from India after chloramphenical was
detected.
One would have thought that the shrimp producing
countries would have stopped using this toxic drug. Not so. It
continues to be used in the shrimp sold locally or exported.
Inpite of the fact that the US FDA only tests 1 to 2 % of all
shrimp imported to the United States, it is still being
detected.
In November 2001, an on-site inspection of
Chinese shrimp production facilities by EU officials "revealed
serious deficiencies of the Chinese control system relating to
the use of banned substances ." In May 2002 the U.S.
detected chloramphenicol in imported Chinese shrimp. EU
inspection officials found repeated shipments of Chinese shrimp
imports contaminated with chloramphenicol and ordered a ban of
Chinese shrimp imports. in July 2004, the EU agreed to take
Chinese shrimp only after the Chinese government guaranteed that
it would test 100 % of Chinese shrimp exports. In 2006
the FDA blocked the sale of shrimp from China because of
repeated instances of contamination. The F.D.A. said it decided
to take the action after years of warnings that resulted in no
signs of improvement..In 2006, F.D.A. officials went to China to
inspect aquaculture operations and found "the residue control
program ineffective." with 15 percent of the samples
contaminated.
Thailand claimed to have banned
chloramphenicol in 1999 but the detection of the drug in Thai
shrimp prompted a ban by the EU in 2007.
In 2004 Indonesia’s shrimps were found to be
infected by viruses and contaminated by chloramphenicol.
From 2003 to 2005, Canada imposed a 100 percent
inspection policy on seafood exports from Vietnam after
Vietnamese seafood products repeatedly tested positive for
chloramphenicol. Japan did it in 2006 and Russia in 2007.
Cambodia invited EU authorities to conduct an
investigation of shrimp plants in the country in 2005. The
EU officials found the processing facilities with "very
poor hygiene situation"; and Cambodia’s process of certifying
the food safety of export shipments was a sham. The EU continues
to prohibit Cambodian seafood exports from entering Europe.
In early 2007, the EU completed an on-site
review of seafood safety systems in Pakistan that revealed
severe deficiencies in the country’s food safety controls.
Based on these findings, the EU decertified all shrimp from
Pakistan in 2007
The EU’s lists on the Net shows that there have
been continued findings of banned antibiotics including
chloramphenicol in shrimp and prawn exports from India .
In 2007 The Marine Products Export Development Authority (MPEDA)
threatened to clamp down on farms that are selling shrimp from
India that contain antibiotic residues. In a letter to
exporters, whose shipments were rejected by authorities in
the European Union because their shrimp had antibiotic residues,
MPEDA said it would withdraw the permits granted to their
processing plants and scrap their export licenses if any more
shipments were rejected. In November 2007, MPEDA sent the
letter to six companies in Andhra Pradesh, the centre of the
country’s shrimp farming industry : Devi Fisheries Ltd, Devi
Seafood Ltd, Welcome Fisheries Ltd, Surya Mitra Eximps Pvt. Ltd,
Satya Sea Foods Ltd and Jagadeesh Marine Exports.
According to MPEDA’s letter, there have been
rampant use of antibiotics such as chloramphenicol and
nitrofuran on shrimp farms and the use of antibiotics damages
"the very name and image of the country".
More rigorous testing methods in the US
have detected Chloramphenicol in Bangladesh and Mexico
shrimp .The FDA recognised, in a letter sent in response to
Citizens Petitions, that "there is abundant evidence that
chloramphenicol is still in widespread use abroad, particularly
in Southeast Asia"
Raised in crowded and dirty ponds, with almost
no quality control, shrimp develop in poor sanitary conditions,
in ponds with high feces concentrations, banned antibiotics, and
toxic chemicals. As a result, shrimp often contain harmful
antibiotics, pesticides, salmonella, and filth. Drugs are widely
available without prescription, and the government’s ability to
test and follow-up on problems is limited. Some farmers try to
maximize the output from their small plots by flooding produce
with unapproved pesticides, pumping livestock with antibiotics
and using human or chicken feces as food.
Every time you eat a shrimp you eat an
antibiotic, specifically chloramphenicol. This will never
change. The more antibiotics you eat, the more rapidly bacterial
resistance develops. When such resistance develops, the
antibiotic becomes incapable of curing the disease. Which
means that next time you are ill, no antibiotic will help you.
Disease-causing microbes that have become resistant to drug
therapy are an increasing public health problem.
Tuberculosis, gonorrhea, malaria, and childhood ear infections
are just a few of the diseases that have become hard to treat
with antibiotic drugs. Add to that the risk of cancer from the
antibiotic itself: is the shrimp worth it?
To join the animal welfare movement contact gandhim@nic.in