BILOXI, Miss., April 20, 2016 -- The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued an “Import Alert” for farmed shrimp from Malaysia. Of Malaysian shrimp sampled, 32 percent contained illegal and unsafe amounts of antibiotics, including one that has been shown to cause blood disorders and leukemia.
|
|||
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/03bb3834-0cb4-4a24-a962-3a1714fd73d0
Foreign aquaculture operations use antibiotics to treat shrimp’s bacterial infections, which are rampant due to crowded and unsanitary growing conditions. Chloramphenicol, an antibiotic reserved for use treating drug-resistant strains of plague and typhoid fever, is one of the main culprits in detained Malaysian shrimp.
Dr. David Veal, Executive Director of the American Shrimp Processors Association (ASPA), has said, “This is even more evidence that American restaurants, retailers and consumers should be paying attention to the labels on the shrimp they’re buying. When buying American shrimp, consumers can always be confident that Wild American shrimp products meet or exceed the highest standards, which is not the same case with imports.”
The FDA is responsible for ensuring the safety of any food imported from foreign countries. In this case, so much shrimp from peninsular Malaysia has been unfit for consumption that the FDA took extreme measures to keep American consumers safe.
Shrimp is the most popular seafood in the United States, with an average of four pounds eaten per person. 90 percent of those pounds will be from imported shrimp.
An Import Alert means shipments are guilty until proven innocent, and FDA staff can “detain without physical examination,” or refuse to release the shrimp for sale, until the country exporting it can prove beyond a doubt that the product is safe. In 2015, Malaysia exported 17 million pounds of shrimp to the United States.
About the American Shrimp Processors Association: The American Shrimp Processors Association (ASPA), based in Biloxi, Mississippi, was formed in 1964 to represent and promote the interests of the domestic, U.S. wild-caught, warm water shrimp processing industry along the Gulf and South Atlantic with members from Texas to North Carolina. We are the collective voice of the industry, and our focus is to promote the interests of shrimp processors, other segments of the U.S. domestic wild-caught warm water shrimp industry and the general public. More information is available at http://www.americanshrimp.com.
Media Contact: David Veal, Executive Director [email protected] (228) 806-9600


Pilots Fear Retaliation for Refusing Middle East Flights Amid Ongoing Conflict
China Vanke Seeks Bond Extension Amid Mounting Debt Crisis
TSMC Posts Strong Q1 2025 Revenue, Riding AI Chip Demand Wave
U.S. Automakers Push Back Against EU Rules Blocking American Trucks from European Market
NIO ES9 SUV Launch Sends HK Shares Down 7% Despite Bold Pricing Strategy
Foreign Investors Pour $18.65 Billion into Japanese Stocks Amid Market Stabilization
China's AI Stocks Surge as Zhipu and MiniMax Hit Record Highs
Rio Tinto's California Boron Assets Attract Over a Dozen Bidders, Valued at Up to $2 Billion
FedEx Pilots and Union Reach Tentative Agreement on 40% Pay Increase
MATCH Act: How New U.S. Chip Legislation Could Freeze China's Semiconductor Ambitions
Chalco Stock Surges as Q1 2025 Profit Forecast Jumps Up to 58%
Kia Cuts EV Sales Target for 2030 Amid Slowing Demand and U.S. Policy Shifts
Alibaba Shares Slide as Jefferies Slashes Price Target Over AI Spending and Business Losses
Lumentum Holdings Rides AI Wave With Order Book Filled Through 2028
Disney Plans to Cut 1,000 Jobs Amid Ongoing Restructuring Efforts
Pony.ai, Uber, and Verne Launch Europe's First Commercial Robotaxi Service in Zagreb
SanDisk Joins Nasdaq-100, Replacing Atlassian on April 20 



