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Italy's 'Mad Buffalo' cheese disease

cheese and italy

Italy has its own version of Mad Cow disease. It hasn't got a name yet, but you could call it Mad Buffalo disease. Buffalo milk, not cow's milk, is used to make Italy's finest mozzarella, the rubbery, and expensive, porcelain-white cheese used in pizza and lasagna. Some of the buffalo milk is contaminated with dioxin and sales of mozzarella are down between 30 and 50 per cent. Japan and South Korea this week banned mozzarella imports.

No one I know is buying buffalo mozzarella, most of which comes from the Campania region around garbage-clogged Naples. The Italians are furious. Not only is mozzarella a dietary staple, it is a symbol of Italy's glorious food culture. Shame on mozzarella translates into shame on Italy.

The Italians blame the Neapolitan Mafia, known as the Camorra, for the mozzarella crisis. They are probably right. The run-off from the Camorra's illegal toxic dumps in Campania has no doubt contaminated the land and the water in some parts of the region. Dioxins are a known carcinogenic (though there are many types of dioxin, ranging from the relatively benign to the outright deadly). Dozens of buffalo herds have been quarantined because of higher-than-normal dioxin levels have been found in the animals' milk. Italy has some 250,000 buffalo whose milk is devoted to mozzarella production.

This being Italy, it's extremely hard for consumers to judge the true health risks. Unbiased opinions are rare and spin is rife. The Italian government today essentially told everyone to relax. Agriculture minister Paulo De Castro slammed what he called “the negative campaign that risks having an important economic and social impact on all products from Campania.” 

Note that the minister didn't go so far as to say all buffalo mozzarella is safe. Meanwhile the Italian Confederation of Farmers said the mozzarella panic is not justified because the contamination affects only a tiny portion of the mozzarella farms. But the European Commission is erring on the side of caution. On Tuesday it asked for assurances from the Italian health and food authorities that the mozzarella is safe. It wants an answer by tomorrow.

The tragedy of the mozzarella mess is that everyone saw it coming and almost nothing was done about it. It's been an open secret for years that the Camorra hass been dumping thousands of truck loads of toxic waste on farms (some of which they probably own), in rivers and in caves in Campania. Two years ago Italian author Roberto Saviano wrote a book, called “Gomorra,” about the Camorra's stranglehold on the Neapolitan economy. Several chapters were devoted to the toxic waste racket.

Mr. Saviano said the problem began in earnest in the 1990s, when the Camorra cleverly solved northern Italy's shortage of dumps and incinerator capacity by trucking the waste south and stuffing it into already-packed landfills and unlicensed sites. One cavern was found brimming with the equivalent of 28,000 truckloads of trash.

Because the Mob charges close to market rates to pick up the waste but dumps it for next to nothing, the profits are lavish. "We're talking about six billion euros in two years," Mr. Saviano said in an interview by email in February (he lives under police protection because of the mob death threats against him and rarely gives face-to-face interviews). "Farmlands bought at extremely low prices are transformed into illegal dumping grounds. Putting their own men into the local administration, the Camorra enters the waste business at all levels. … The type of garbage dumped includes everything: barrels of paint, printer toner, human skeletons, cloths used for cleaning cow udders, zinc, arsenic and the residue of industrial chemicals."

The authorities finally caught on in 2002, when the first of the "eco-Mafia" trials began. But the problem persists. In a 2006 study of 196 municipalities in the region, the World Health Organization found "significant excesses" — up to 12 per cent higher than the national average — for stomach, liver, kidney, lung and pancreatic cancer. In the town of Acerra, about 20 kilometres northeast of Naples, sheep are dying because of high levels of toxicity found in the land. Many thousands of buffalo have been slaughtered.

In spite of the effort by the mozzarella makers and the government to remove some of the fear factor, the truth is the dioxin contamination could be widespread in Campania, thanks to the toxic dumps. If so the mozzarella crisis will take months, perhaps years, go go away. Fancy pizza with cheddar instead?

 

 

  1. Kenneth Young from Nanaimo, Canada writes: Just like Canada at CFB Gagetown, Italy will take emergency steps to protect the market, with no mention of protecting the public.Yesterday Italy claimed that there were no unacceptable levels of Dioxin found in the cheese and today they are with this statement, “Italian authorities are investigating whether feed given to buffalo herds around the city of Naples was contaminated, possibly made by Naples Mafia or Camorra involved in illegal waste disposal,” insinuating that they both didn’t know and that it’s not their fault because it might be the Mafia fault. This is beginning to sound more and more like the Canadian Governments run-around story concerning CFB Gagetown and the 143 times the Canadian Counsel of Environmental Ministers (CCME) acceptable levels for dioxin still found there today, over forty years after the last chemicals containing dioxin were allegedly sprayed there. However it must be noted by both governments that weather they knew that there was dioxin or not isn’t the question and in fact they had and still have the responsibility as well as the duty, to have known. In Italy’s case it is apparent that the feed, Animals, milk and even the cheese wasn’t tested properly before being unleashed on the world. In Canada’s case the chemicals, the so called inert substances and medical consequences were just as neglected before registering a product that no one in their right mind would consider safe once the facts were known. Neglecting your duties and/or job shouldn’t be any excuse for the harm done to unsuspecting and trusting citizens after all we do elect them, pay good salaries and indexed pensions to protect us and to work in the best interest of the People who vote them into office. On a lighter note, Ottawa could have learned from Italy. Blaming the dioxin on the Mafia and their illegal waste disposal is pure genius. LOL Well in any case it makes better print in my opinion then the CanTox environmental Gagetown style white-wash report.
  2. giornalista in Mtl from Canada writes: I used to question my grandparents' logic for chosing to emigrate from balmy southern Italy to icy cold Canada. Reading stories like this, I'm immensely glad they did...
  3. globefan Eh from Canada writes: Thank you for a nicely written and informative piece.

    Organised crime and certain corporations who would pollute and hide have been allowed to do this because of corrupt politicians, those days might be over, when you start poisoning people's kids..people get upset and get really mad enough to call for change. We are no longer unaware.
  4. Kenneth Young from Nanaimo, Canada writes: On further reflection and reading the article over again I wonder why Canada and other countries stop at Cheese.

    Italy seems to be indicating that they have lost complete control of at least one province of their country and that Mafia elements in Camorra have both taken over the disposal of toxic waste but have also decided how and where they will dispose of it.

    It might be time for Canada as well as every other country to start testing all food products from Italy. If dioxin is so prevalent that their cheese has been contaminated by feed grains feed to the Buffalo, then it can be said to have entered the food chain. Dioxin is a chemical which likes to attach itself to fat molecules, such as in the butter fat within milk, but I am now wondering if we shouldn't be just as worried with other oil or fat based food products such as Olive Oil, olives and even Italian meat/sausages products.

    Just a thought but I believe I will now stop buying food products of Italy. Sorry but I already have enough Dioxin and HCB from Gagetown and I can't really afford any more.

    Cpl. Kenneth H. Young CD (Ret'd).
  5. Lemmy Nothor from Exiled on main street Barcelona, Spain writes: Kenneth Young from Nanaimo, Canada writes:
    ..... but I am now wondering if we shouldn't be just as worried with other oil or fat based food products such as Olive Oil, olives and even Italian meat/sausages products.

    <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

    Just to reassure you concerning olive oil fom Italy, more than 50% if not more of Italian olive oil actually comes from Spain.
  6. Colleen Patrick-Goudreau from San Francisco, United States writes: For human health, for the environment, for the animals - pick a reason - we do so much better when we leave animal products off our plates. Italy has an abundance of gorgeous produce (and Italians know how to prepare it!), as well as grains and so many other plant-based foods that there is no dearth of options. Even the oldest, most traditional pizza is Pizza Marinara, which calls for no cheese and is as delicious as can be. Stories such as these (in Europe and in North America, as well as elsewhere) continue to validate the safety and healthfulness of a plant-based diet.

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