An employee carries a sack of rice imported from the United States inside a Shodecosa industrial park warehouse, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. Shodecosa is the country's largest industrial park, which warehouses 93 percent of the nation’s imported food. (PHOTO / AP)
PORT-AU-PRINCE - US rice exports to Haiti, which account for the bulk of supplies of the country's key food staple, contain unhealthy levels of arsenic and cadmium, heavy metals that can increase risks of cancer and heart disease, according to a recent study by the University of Michigan.
Haiti is among the United States' top buyers of rice, alongside Mexico and Japan, and cheap imports are more affordable than local options in the Caribbean nation, the poorest state in the Western Hemisphere.
According to the study, average arsenic and cadmium concentrations were nearly twice as high in imported rice compared to Haitian-grown product, with some imported samples exceeding international limits
According to the study, average arsenic and cadmium concentrations were nearly twice as high in imported rice compared to Haitian-grown product, with some imported samples exceeding international limits.
Nearly all imported rice samples exceeded the US Food and Drug Administration's recommendation for children's consumption. The study did not evaluate levels of toxins in other importing countries.
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The US FDA and State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The study, which attributed the dominance of imported rice to lower import tariffs and long-term contracts signed during political turmoil in the late 1980s and 1990s, said Haiti imports nearly 90 percent of its rice, almost exclusively from the US.
Former US president Bill Clinton, who helped push subsidies of US rice to Haiti, later called the move a "mistake" saying it had battered local production capacity.
The study also pointed to comparatively loose US limits on concentrations arsenic and cadmium, which can leach from both human and naturally occurring sources to contaminate food and water. Rice is especially prone to absorb these metals.
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The report cited Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas as top exporting states.
When researchers ran the study in 2020, they found that Haitians on average consumed 85 kg (187 lb) of rice per year, compared to 12 kg in the US, putting especially young Haitians at far greater risk of developing related health complications.
"The flooding of US rice into Haiti is not only economically violent for Haitian peyizan who struggle to sell their local product, but also violent toward the long-term health of Haitian consumers," the report said.
"By maintaining a system dependent almost exclusively on US rice, Haiti is importing a substantial amount of risk."
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The report called for an ethical investigation into US rice exporters, measures to strengthen Haiti's agricultural sector and flagged a "dire need" to boost the country's food safety regulations.
A violent conflict between heavily armed gangs has been spreading to Haitian farmlands, further pushing up food prices. The United Nations estimates over 300,000 have fled their homes and that some 40 percent of the population is going hungry.