| ▲ | legacynl 3 hours ago | |||||||
> but the fact that chlorination is needed. You're wrong. The whole point is this: in EU, you cannot chlorinate your chickens. This means that to sell chicken, you need to make sure that your chicken is good to eat without chlorination (by making sure your whole production chain is sanitized up to sufficient level). In the US you don't need to make sure your production chain is super high sanitation quality because you can chlorinate the chicken afterwards. This means that you don't have to spend money/effort cleaning up your chains, because you can dip them in chlorine after. From a health perspective there is honestly not that big of a difference. The resulting product in both cases is chicken that's safe to eat. The real reason for the difference in policy is the incentives that it creates for the meat-producers. In the US there is no incentive to keep sanitation up in the production chains because the chicken will be chlorinated anyway. This actually incentivizes sloppy (cheaper) production methods over ones that are more sanitized but more costly. On the other hand, in the EU you cannot wash chicken meat, so it needs to be kept clean and sanitized throughout the production process. | ||||||||
| ▲ | toyg an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> The whole point is this: in EU, you cannot chlorinate your chickens. It's a bit of a chicken-and-egg issue, really (pun intended). In the end, it doesn't really matter why things got where they are - what matters is where we want them to go next. And US interests seem to be hell-bent on continuing to wash chickens. So they will continue to be banned from Europe. | ||||||||
| ▲ | gruez 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
>The real reason for the difference in policy is the incentives that it creates for the meat-producers. In the US there is no incentive to keep sanitation up in the production chains because the chicken will be chlorinated anyway. This actually incentivizes sloppy (cheaper) production methods over ones that are more sanitized but more costly. If there's no actual downsides from the chlorine, what's the issue? In many cities the municipal water source is local river that's polluted, and needs treatment to be drinkable. Part of that process might involve adding chlorine. I'm sure that all of this can be avoided if the water is sourced, at great expense, from a glacier or whatever, but nobody would suggest we should ban chlorinating water, and that allowing chlorinating water would be better because it forces the water source to be clean. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | yohannparis an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
You just said the same thing. | ||||||||