BEIJING: The worker who was filmed urinating into a large malt container at one of the company’s plants in Pingdu, has been detained by the police, said Tsingtao Brewery ohas said in a statement.
The Chinese beer brand apologised and said in a statement that it has acknowledged the management loopholes and pledged to implement measures to standardise the production process and enhance personnel management to prevent such incidents from happening again.
“The company has strictly implemented a quality control system by employing fully enclosed dumping vehicles for transporting raw materials to avoid contact between people and ingredients and we have upgraded the monitoring system with artificial intelligence technology to consolidate effective monitoring of the whole process,” said Tsingtao.
An investigation team comprised of local police and market regulatory authorities revealed the details of the incident on Wednesday, saying that a loader with the surname Cui - who had been hired by a third party - urinated inside a truck transporting raw materials while it was unloading malt at the Tsingtao Brewery No. 3 factory on Oct 19.
On Oct 22, Cui was detained for intentional property damage, and the batch of malt in question, weighing about 400 metric tons, was completely sealed and disposed of under supervision, guaranteeing that it won’t be used in production.
Shares in Tsingtao Brewery continued to fall after the statements were issued, declining 2.25 per cent and 1.21 per cent respectively on the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchanges on Thursday.
While some Internet users said it is correct for the company to punish those accountable, other netizens questioned the subcontracted services, expressing concerns over the quality and safety of the production and calling for financial punishment and business restriction.
One netizen on microblogging platform Sina Weibo pointed out that punishment for food safety violations in European countries was much more severe.
In 2013, a horse meat scandal erupted in Europe when food labelled as beef was found to contain various amounts of horse meat. After the exposure, several European countries tested 2,250 processed beef samples marketed as containing beef.
The business permit of a French company was revoked for knowingly selling horse meat as beef, and three English people were arrested for fraud. The Dutch government later raised the maximum fine on enterprises involved in food safety issues from 4,500 euros (S$6,500) to 810,000 euros.
Another netizen emphasised the importance of whole-process supervision by citing the production chain of eggs in Germany. Eggs sold in the country are imprinted with a specific serial number recording detailed information about where the chickens were raised and what they were fed.
Established in 1903, Tsingtao is one of the best-known beer brands in the country. - The Straits Times/ANN