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Dairy farming American-style in China

Posted: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 12:05 PM
Filed Under:

SANHE, HEBEI PROVINCE, China – Spend an afternoon with the men who run the HuaXia Dairy Farm in Hebei Province and you soon suspect they are on a mission that’s more than simply about making money.

"We want to provide all the Chinese people [the ability to] drink fresh milk," said ER Hong, HuaXia’s Chief Strategy Officer, as we walked around the clean yet odorous farm that’s home to 5,000 cows and a lot of imported technology.

VIDEO: Implementing American technology on a Chinese dairy farm

"In China right now, most people are not drinking fresh milk," continued the Taiwan native who says he grew up drinking fresh milk daily and talks about dairy as a basic human right. "Not many places can produce fresh milk."

It might sound like an odd pitch to make, given the bad press dairy products have been getting here lately. In September, the industrial chemical melamine was discovered in Chinese-made powdered and fresh milk and other dairy products sold in China and exported to parts of East Asia and Africa. Four babies died from kidney failure and at least 54,000 other young children in China have fallen ill as a result of drinking the tainted milk.

But HuaXia is poised to help overhaul the way millions of dairy farms operate across the country.

Bringing U.S. technology to Chinese agriculture
HuaXia was founded four years ago by Charles Shao, a 49-year-old information technology specialist, when he decided to pack up his life in Santa Monica, Calif., after the venture he was involved in sold to Google for a princely sum. "This was kind of a retirement for me," he laughed.

But when he arrived in China in 2003, he was determined to start his next adventure in an entirely different field. "[Some friends and I] were looking into either a vineyard or a dairy farm, and I choose the dairy farm," said Shao, whose mild manner belies an instinct for ambitious enterprise.

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
Hua Xia Dairy Farm has 5,000 cows, making it one of the largest in China.

Agriculture, as he saw it, was the last frontier in China’s economy. "If you try to set up a technology company here, there’s pretty much competition everywhere."

Moreover, there was an opportunity to make a real difference by focusing on agriculture. "The idea of dairy farming is actually to bring in U.S. technologies to do technology transfer so we can teach people in China how to do dairy farming correctly," he said.

It might sound presumptuous, but ongoing food safety scandals over the decades suggest Chinese farmers could use the help. Last month, melamine was discovered in not only powdered milk but also fresh milk, yoghurt, and some brands of cookies and candies.

And just this past weekend, authorities in Hong Kong found melamine in chicken eggs produced by a food distributor in the northeastern Chinese port city of Dalian.

Trying to regulate a fragmented system
The central government continues to take steps to try to address the problems of food safety; they include adopting a comprehensive food safety law and consolidating regulatory agencies to tighten oversight, but regulation may not be enough.

"We’ve found in other countries, when you have separate systems, one for the farm, one for industrial production, one for the retail sector and so on, it doesn’t work," said Jorgen Schlundt, Director of the World Health Organization’s Food Safety, Zoonoses, and Foodborne Diseases.

And China’s food production and supply chain is highly fragmented – especially the dairy system, which consists of millions of individual farmers who have been encouraged in recent years by government reformers seeking to promote dairy farming as an alternative income source.

"You have small-scale farmers that have four cows or eight cows," said David Oliver, an agriculture consultant. "They then sell to their larger milk companies. Quite often, they don’t have their own milking shed facilities like you would find in the U.S. So what they do every day is bring their cows to a community milking shed. The milk is then sent to the milk company. Sometimes those milking sheds are owned directly by the milk company but at other times they’re owned by a third party contractor."

It’s those third-party contractors who are suspected of being central in this latest scandal. Last week, six people were arrested for either selling melamine to milk suppliers or adding the chemical themselves directly to milk.

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
NBC News cameraman David Lom and assistant Ed Flanagan get up close and personal with the cows.

Running a clean farm
One of HuaXia’s operational advantages is its size. Of the 5,000 cows it owns – making it one of the top 20 largest dairy farms in the country – 1,000 are milking cows, producing 30 tons of milk a day.

All the animals are closely monitored for illnesses, and the milk produced is tested on a daily basis by the farm itself and on a weekly basis by an independent lab hired by HuaXia. The milk is then sent directly to a processing plant for packaging, eliminating the need for a middleman.

It’s a single-stream system – from the farm directly to the table – that experts like Schlundt and his colleagues at the WHO say is key to ensuring food safety.

Shao and his colleagues have invested in state-of-the-art equipment to help monitor the quality of their milk, thus making the farm work like an assembly factory.

"Even though we have U.S. technologies, we’re still in China," said Shao. There are no specialist herdsmen and farm labor is unskilled. "We instead have to compartmentalize and make our staff task-oriented," he explained. "The concept of high quality, quality assurance, and all these things is new to them."

HuaXia’s cows come from New Zealand or Australia, and the heavy equipment – like the mixing wagon to feed the animals, as well as the tractor required to pull the wagon – comes from the U.S.

Shao and his team’s efforts to run a tight ship are paying off. Not only have they easily weathered the milk scandal, their reputation for safe, fresh milk is gathering momentum. HuaXia already works with the U.S. Grains Council as a demonstration farm and training center for Chinese farmers. And the company is hoping to gain the seal of approval for quality and safety from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

"It’s possible to change how dairy farming is in China," said Shao. "We’re a good example!"

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Comments

BRAVO! Health is something everyone worldwide should be entiteld to, and this wonderful man is bravely doing his part to help.
Excellent article.
Cow’s milk is not a mandatory ingredient in the human diet. Today any Chinese person who wish’s and can afford to drink milk can buy it. How much grain does a cow have to eat to produce a gallon of milk? How many people can be feed from that same quantity of grain? Two thirds of the world’s population has never used a telephone. People growing accustomed to milk produced in such a manner, is not good for the planet, and makes people more reliant on a growingly complex food supply chain.
The one question I have about this article is, are these people exporting U.S. farming practices to other countries, in this case China, addressing the pitfalls and issues of America's style of industrial farming/food production?  The U.S. dairy industry is a major source of pollution (mosty water) and (as has been recently documented) animal cruelty. Our giant industrial dairy farms produce significant amounts of animal waste and every year they are an enormous contributor to pollution in our waterways.  When we export these farming practices that turn animals and animal husbandry into an industrial machine, we are exporting the good with the bad and places like China may be trading one set of problems for another.  It is funny, right now in many places in America there is a movement away from procuring food from large industrial farms to local purveyors with small-scale operations...so we are exporting what we see as an "old" and problematic system to China and importing their "old" system of local farmers with small-scale production.  Hmmmm?
it's great to see the chi-com governtment allowing an operation like this to happen. it's awful that food safety there is so unsure and perhaps operations like this will help the chinese people to live healthier, happier lives
Please send your milk to Canada. We get bent over in high prices for milk here.I know you will use U.S. tech, not Canada for your farms. Canada has only video game tech for export.Too much pot smoking here.
I've been to China numerous times, and what scared me more than the pollution was the locally made Chinese food. Even the Taiwanese expats in China avoided the Chinese food in China - they 'imported' their own potstickers and other foodstuffs and they patronized their own restaurants. That's where I ate Chinese food. Maybe the situation will change in ten years' time. Until then, no made-in-China food for me or my family.
Great!
They have mastered the secret of a large dairy - attention to small details and using the most current technology
It is China and other places that Americans are getting their milk??   We have one dairy farm left in our area and the milk goes to a local cheese factory.
America is not changed its mind about "sending our industry overseas"   So what we have left is a service "industry"   and a "wall street"  financial "industry".  Give some thought to who has been planning this for the last 35 years and what their "goal" is.
Alta Genetics is paving the way for their products and programs to reach progressive Chinese dairymen. The Chinese economy is booming and the demand for dairy products is growing. The pressure on the Chinese dairy industry is immense and we help farmers to become more sustainable and profitable from dairy farming.
This article exposes the tip of one gigantic iceberg. If we demand that our gov. do all it can to promote, demand, and reward development of the next technologies, we can become a producing nation again. The race is on!


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