If we remain COVID free, AU/NZ may become an even more treasured source of 
‘clean’ food for the world?

“Coronavirus ‘hitching a ride on food’ to spread around world, Singapore 
scientist says”

While it remains a ‘freakish’ event, the global food trade’s scale means 
transmission will occur, said infectious disease specialist Dale Fisher

The theory has been played down by the World Health Organization and some 
Western nations – though China has been vocal about it for months

Bloomberg in Singapore  Published: 10:30pm, 29 Oct, 2020  
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/3107682/coronavirus-hitching-ride-food-spread-around-world


A Singapore-based scientist has warned of the risk of cross-border coronavirus 
transmission through the US$1.5 trillion global agri-food market.

It is possible that contaminated food imports can transfer the virus to workers 
as well as the environment, said Dale Fisher, an infectious diseases doctor at 
Singapore’s National University Hospital. Frozen-food markets are thought to be 
one harbour in the first part of a chain of transmission, he added.

“It’s hitching a ride on the food, infecting the first person that opens the 
box,” Fisher, who also chairs the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network, 
said in an interview. “It’s not to be confused with supermarket shelves getting 
infected. It’s really at the marketplace.”

In recent months China has been vocal about finding traces of the SARS-CoV-2 
pathogen on packaging and food, raising fears that imported items are linked to 
recent virus resurgences. Beijing has ordered a range of precautionary steps, 
creating major disruptions with its trading partners.

A lot of people may be against this because they don’t want to scare the world 
– the food could be a source
Dale Fisher, Singapore’s National University Hospital

It is a theory that has been played down by the World Health Organization and 
some Western nations. The WHO has said recent evidence of epidemiology shows 
that it’s “unlikely” that the virus could be transmitted from the surfaces to 
human respiratory systems, while the US Food and Drug Administration has also 
stated it is not aware of any evidence to suggest the disease can spread 
through food.

Outside China, where authorities are increasingly weighing in the possibility 
that the virus can be carried and transmitted via food packaging, the theory is 
barely mentioned or discussed. Fisher is one of the few international experts 
who studies the seeding of outbreaks in contaminated fresh and frozen food.

“There’s two schools of thought and the minority view which I adhere to is that 
there’s a lot of circumstantial evidence,” Fisher said. “A lot of people may be 
against this because they don’t want to scare the world – the food could be a 
source.”

Experiments done by Fisher’s team show the coronavirus could survive in the 
time and temperatures associated with transportation and storage conditions 
used in the international food trade. The study published in August showed no 
weakening of the infectious virus after 21 days at standard food refrigeration 
and freezing temperatures when the pathogen was added to samples of chicken, 
salmon and pork.

The fact that the virus tends to thrive in cold and dry environments has made 
cold-storage facilities ideal spaces for the pathogen to spread. Meatpacking 
plants and abattoirs, instead of schools and churches, are more likely to be 
hotspots for Covid-19 outbreaks, according to Fisher.

“It’s because there’s a lot of stainless steel, which it grows on,” he said. 
“It’s cold, it’s crowded – it’s noisy so the people have to yell.”

Earlier this month, authorities in the eastern Chinese coastal city of Qingdao 
said they found live SARS-CoV-2 on imported frozen seafood, with two port 
workers responsible for unloading the refrigerated packaging testing positive 
for the virus.

China has said several times in recent months that imported refrigerated goods 
are risks for reintroducing the coronavirus into the country. It subsequently 
banned imported products, including seafood from Indonesia and chicken wings 
from Brazil, after positive tests on shipping containers and food packaging.

A June outbreak in Beijing triggered a nationwide boycott of salmon when the 
virus was traced to the chopping board of a seller of imported fish. New 
Zealand, which has maintained long virus-free stretches, also said it was 
looking at the chance that one of its new clusters could be linked to a 
cold-storage plant.

Fisher argued the reason Asian countries are more likely to find evidence of 
food and packaging transmission is thanks to the now contained nature of 
outbreaks in many of those countries, unlike those in the West now battling a 
second wave of infections.

“You’d never pick it up in the US or in Europe because you only pick it up if 
you go from zero cases for 100 days, and then have a small cluster,” he said. 
“You say, well how did this small cluster start?”

To prevent this, food production companies need to ensure workers are vigilant 
on mask-wearing, hand-washing and regular sanitisation of surfaces and 
utensils. “And you need to make sure that all these outbreaks in meat 
processing plants stop,” he said.

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