Gyeonggi Province, 1,138 Hanwoo DNA tests, no cases of ‘Hanwoo Disguise’ in South Korea

Published 2024년 12월 24일

Tridge summary

Gyeonggi Province has announced the results of its 1,138 Hanwoo DNA tests conducted this year, revealing no cases of Hanwoo meat being mislabeled. However, 25 cases were found where lower grade meat was labeled with the history number of a higher grade Hanwoo, or the history number was not updated, indicating poor livestock product management. All cases will be reported to the relevant authorities for administrative action and further investigation. The province is aiming to eliminate illegal distribution of livestock products by promoting the livestock product history system and increasing inspection of Hanwoo meat. The head of the Gyeonggi Animal Hygiene Testing Center anticipates this will boost farmers' profits and stimulate local economic growth by ensuring the distribution of genuine Korean beef.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Gyeonggi Province announced that out of 1,138 cases of Hanwoo DNA testing conducted this year, not a single case of Hanwoo disguise was found. The testing lab conducted 1,138 Hanwoo DNA tests this year, including the comprehensive testing conducted from November 6 to 16. There were no cases of Hanwoo disguise, but out of 307 DNA identity tests, 25 cases in 17 places were judged unsuitable. This means that even for the same Hanwoo beef, lower grade beef was falsely labeled with the history number of another Hanwoo with a higher meat quality grade, or the history number on the label was not changed, resulting in poor management of livestock product history. All of the cases detected this time will be reported to the relevant city or county, and administrative measures and follow-up investigations will be conducted. Hanwoo genetic testing is divided into two types: Hanwoo confirmation testing and beef DNA (gene) identity testing. The Hanwoo verification test examines samples ...
Source: Agrinet

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