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NEW YORK, March 9, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:
Global Food Safety Testing Market by Contaminants, Technology, Food Types, Geography: Trends & Forecast (2010 - 2015)
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DALLAS, March 7, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- The Global Food Safety Testing Market By Contaminants, Technology, Food Types, Geography: Trends & Forecast (2010 - 2015) analyzes the food safety testing market by technology and applications and studies the major market drivers, restraints, and opportunities for the food safety testing market in North America, Europe, Asia, and ROW.
Browse market data tables and in-depth TOC on global food safety testing market by contaminants, technology, food types, geography: Trends & forecast (2010 - 2015)
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Analyst[R] Software Application for Mass Spectrometry Systems Identifies More Than 600 Substances
FOSTER CITY, Calif. -- Public concern over the saf...
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Bisphenol A, better knows as BPA, has received considerable attention in the media in recent years and in Maine in the past week. You may be thinking this really doesn't have a lot to do with you, or with nutrition. Well, if you heat anything in the microwave, or use any food or beverage products that come in cans or reusable plastic containers, then BPA impacts your life. Worldwide, more than six billion pounds of BPA are manufactured every year. BPA is in the bloodstream of nearly every person in the United States.
BPA is an industrial chemical found in polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins. It has been used in food packaging materials for over 40 years. Polycarbonate plastics, which carry the No. 7 recycling symbol, are often used in containers that store food and beverages such as...
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WASHINGTON - Inspecting all catfish, both domestically produced and imported from Southeast Asia, is either an obvious food-safety issue or an unfair trade issue, according to witnesses Tuesday at a public hearing on a proposed USDA rule.
Congress mandated that catfish be inspected by the Agriculture Department in the 2008 Farm Bill, but left up to the department's secretary which species to cover. Foreign breeds with the distinctive whiskers are currently inspected for drug residues and contaminants by the Food and Drug Administration but its efforts have been criticized as inadequate.