| Literature DB >> 23049773 |
Abstract
Worldwide, food supplies often contain unavoidable contaminants, many of which adversely affect health and hence are subject to regulations of maximum tolerable levels in food. These regulations differ from nation to nation, and may affect patterns of food trade. We soughtto determine whether there is an association between nations' food safety regulations and global food trade patterns, with implications for public health and policymaking. We developed a network model of maize trade around the world. From maize import/export data for 217 nations from 2000-2009, we calculated basic statistics on volumes of trade; then examined how regulations of aflatoxin, a common contaminant of maize, are similar or different between pairs of nations engaging in significant amounts of maize trade. Globally, market segregation appears to occur among clusters of nations. The United States is at the center of one cluster; European countries make up another cluster with hardly any maize trade with the US; and Argentina, Brazil, and China export maize all over the world. Pairs of nations trading large amounts of maize have very similar aflatoxin regulations: nations with strict standards tend to trade maize with each other, while nations with more relaxed standards tend to trade maize with each other. Rarely among the top pairs of maize-trading nations do total aflatoxin standards (standards based on the sum of the levels of aflatoxins B(1), B(2), G(1), and G(2)) differ by more than 5 µg/kg. These results suggest that, globally, separate maize trading communities emerge; and nations tend to trade with other nations that have very similar food safety standards.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23049773 PMCID: PMC3458029 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Top maize exporting and maize importing nations worldwide, based on volume of trade from 2000–2009.
| Rank | Top maize exporting nations and total amount exported 2000–2009, MTs | Top maize importers and total amount imported 2000–2009, MTs | ||
| 1 | USA | 526,670,541 | Japan | 170,279,244 |
| 2 | Argentina | 123,527,253 | Republic of Korea | 90,841,881 |
| 3 | France | 71,269,591 | Mexico | 69,857,045 |
| 4 | China | 65,558,093 | Egypt | 51,446,403 |
| 5 | Brazil | 54,473,911 | Taiwan | 47,282,122 |
| 6 | Hungary | 28,557,159 | Spain | 45,302,592 |
| 7 | Canada | 23,311,927 | USA | 33,978,967 |
| 8 | Ukraine | 19,568,172 | Netherlands | 28,629,716 |
| 9 | South Africa | 15,021,879 | Malaysia | 27,703,058 |
| 10 | Paraguay | 12,051,097 | Iran | 27,178,624 |
| 11 | Mexico | 11,923,079 | Colombia | 26,821,972 |
| 12 | India | 11,738,537 | Canada | 26,012,453 |
| 13 | Germany | 10,400,097 | Algeria | 20,230,143 |
| 14 | Serbia | 6,797,441 | Italy | 16,678,997 |
| 15 | Thailand | 5,366,268 | Germany | 16,548,899 |
| 16 | Romania | 4,859,320 | Israel | 15,658,213 |
| 17 | Switzerland | 3,620,319 | Saudi Arabia | 15,613,125 |
| 18 | Netherlands | 3,601,194 | Portugal | 14,245,589 |
| 19 | Austria | 3,394,665 | Morocco | 14,083,900 |
| 20 | Bulgaria | 2,962,606 | United Kingdom | 13,815,724 |
Source: United Nations Commodity Trade Statistics Database (UN Comtrade, comtrade.un.org). MTs = metric tonnes.
Nations with highest degrees of maize exports and imports: number of other nations with which it trades.
| Rank, by degree | Maize-exporting nations and total number of nations to which they export | Maize-importing nations and total number of nations from which they import | ||
| 1 | USA | 181 | France | 69 |
| 2 | Argentina | 150 | Germany | 66 |
| 3 | South Africa | 128 | USA | 66 |
| 4 | France | 122 | Netherlands | 62 |
| 5 | Canada | 108 | Canada | 58 |
| 6 | Brazil | 101 | Italy | 57 |
| 7 | China | 95 | United Kingdom | 56 |
| 8 | Italy | 94 | Spain | 53 |
| 9 | Netherlands | 86 | Egypt | 53 |
| 10 | India | 85 | Switzerland | 51 |
| 11 | Australia | 78 | Turkey | 47 |
| 12 | Ukraine | 72 | Austria | 46 |
| 13 | Hungary | 72 | Saudi Arabia | 46 |
| 14 | Thailand | 70 | Russian Federation | 44 |
| 15 | Spain | 70 | South Africa | 44 |
| 16 | Germany | 69 | United Arab Emirates | 44 |
| 17 | Turkey | 69 | Bulgaria | 43 |
| 18 | United Arab Emirates | 66 | Israel | 41 |
| 19 | United Kingdom | 63 | Romania | 40 |
| 20 | Chile | 60 | Belgium | 40 |
Source: UN Comtrade.
Figure 1Global maize trade network emphasizing top exporters.
The circle sizes are loosely proportional to the amount of maize exported. Each line represents export/import amount greater than 1 million metric tons from 2000–2009 [Wu and Guclu, unpublished data].
Figure 2Color-coded maximum aflatoxin levels in maize by country: a) On the world map, and b) on the trade network.
Each edge in 2b represents an export/import amount greater than 1 million metric tons from 2000–2009.
Top volumes of maize trade worldwide from 2000–2009.
| Rank | Top exporter-importer pairs and their total aflatoxin (AF) standards in µg/kg maize | Total amount (MT) | |||
| Exporter | AF standard | Importer | AF standard | ||
| 1 | USA | 20 | Japan | 20 | 159,377,000 |
| 2 | USA | 20 | Mexico | 20 | 69,764,700 |
| 3 | USA | 20 | Taiwan | 15 | 44,212,000 |
| 4 | USA | 20 | Korea | 20 | 41,657,300 |
| 5 | China | 40 | Korea | 20 | 36,446,400 |
| 6 | USA | 20 | Egypt | 20 | 35,540,100 |
| 7 | USA | 20 | Canada | 15 | 25,933,000 |
| 8 | USA | 20 | Colombia | 20 | 21,726,900 |
| 9 | Canada | 15 | USA | 20 | 21,161,900 |
| 10 | France | 4 | Spain | 4 | 18,682,400 |
| 11 | France | 4 | Netherlands | 4 | 14,901,600 |
| 12 | Brazil | 30 | Iran | 30 | 12,588,000 |
| 13 | Mexico | 20 | USA | 20 | 10,947,000 |
| 14 | Argentina | 20 | Chile | 5 | 10,625,700 |
| 15 | USA | 20 | Algeria | 20 | 10,457,700 |
| 16 | USA | 20 | Dominican Rep. | 20 | 10,325,300 |
| 17 | Argentina | 20 | Spain | 4 | 10,311,600 |
| 18 | China | 40 | Malaysia | 35 | 10,119,800 |
| 19 | France | 4 | UK | 4 | 9,899,890 |
| 20 | Argentina | 20 | Egypt | 20 | 9,734,360 |
Source: UN Comtrade and FAO [22]. MT = metric tonnes.