Sanlu Group

Sanlu Group
三鹿集团
Former type Private (Bankrupt)
Industry Dairy products
Founded 1995
Defunct 2008
Headquarters Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China
Area served China
Key people Zhang Zhenling (Chairman)
Products Milk, baby milk, powdered milk
Sanlu Group
Chinese 三鹿集团
Literal meaning Three deer group

Sanlu Group was a state-owned Chinese dairy products company based in Shijiazhuang, the capital city of Hebei Province. It was one of the oldest and most popular brands of infant formula in China.[1] New Zealand's Fonterra owned 43% of Sanlu.

In September 2008, it was involved in an adulterated milk powder scandal, affecting some 294,000 Chinese infants and killing six.[2] Their baby milk powder had been tainted with melamine, which can cause kidney stones and other complications. It received a bankruptcy order from Shijiazhuang Court on 24 December 2008,[3][4] and several of its top managers were sentenced to long prison terms.[5]

Contents

Ownership and business

The company began as Shijiazhuang Dairy Company (SDC). After several acquisitions in 1995, Sanlu Group was formed in 1996. Tian Wenhua, then General Manager of SDC, became President and General Manager of Sanlu. Under Tian, Sanlu led the Chinese powder market for 13 consecutive years in terms of sales. Tian was considered one of the most successful entrepreneurs in China for her role in building the company. She was named deputy chairman of the China Dairy Industry Association (中国乳制品工业协会), and elected to the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.[6]

In December 2005, a joint venture agreement was signed which involved New Zealand dairy cooperative Fonterra taking a 43% equity stake in the Chinese dairy[7] by injecting ¥864 million. The joint venture company started trading in 2006.[8] The majority 56% stake is owned by Shijiazhuang Three Deers Limited (石家庄三鹿有限公司).[9]

Expansion

In February 2006, the group opened a dairy plant in Tangshan with annual capacity of 200,000 tons of formula milk powder. At the time of signing the joint venture contract with Fonterra, the company declared it would invest 3 billion yuan for external growth, with the aim of forming a national industrial network over the next three years. In April 2006, Sanlu acquired a liquid milk production base in Weifang, Shandong capable of producing 300,000 tons of liquid milk every year, at an outlay of 400 million yuan. In October of the same year, the company invested production facility with capacity of 100,000 tons of lactic acid bacteria drink and yoghurt in Xinxiang, Henan at a cost of 120 million yuan.[10]

In 2007, its sales reached ¥10 billion.[11] Milk powder sales of the group ranked number 1 for 15 consecutive years, with a market share of 18 percent.[1] The company prided itself in its stringent quality control procedures, boasting its extremely rigorous tests on its products. "Made in China", a special edition of the CCTV program "Quality Reports Weekly" aired on 2 September 2007 focused on the company, who claimed over 1,000 different tests were carried out before its products leave the factory.[12][13] To that end, on 8 January 2008, it was awarded second prize at the 2007 National Scientific Techniques Awards in the category of 'Innovative infant formula research and other related techniques'.[14] A number of its products were exempt from government inspection for having passed government quality checks three times in succession. Sanlu is one of the largest employers in Shijiazhuang, with close to 10,000 people on its payroll.[15]

Demise

In September 2008, Sanlu came to international attention due to product concerns regarding its infant milk formula, which was discovered to have been contaminated with melamine, a non-alimentary chemical which causes kidney stones.[16] An estimated 300,000 babies became ill, and six cases resulted in death.[17].

The Xinhua News Agency reported that Sanlu received its first complaints about baby milk in December 2007.[18][19] Fonterra was alerted to the contamination on 2 August. There was an immediate trade recall, but Fonterra said that local administrators refused an official recall[20]. Fonterra notified the New Zealand government on 5 September. Three days later, Prime Minister, Helen Clark had Beijing officials alerted directly.[20][21] Clark accused the company and officials of covering up to avoid an official recall.[22]

On 15 September, the company issued a public apology for the contaminated milk powder[23]; Sanlu was ordered to halt production, and to destroy all unsold and recalled products. Authorities reportedly seized 10,000 tons of product.[24]

After testing samples from 491 batches of products sold by all 109 companies producing baby milk powder, the National Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said that all 11 samples from Sanlu failed the melamine test.[25][26] Sanlu, whose products sell at half the price of equivalents on the market,[27] recorded the highest levels of contamination among all the samples tested, at 2,563 ppm.[28]

Tian Wenhua (田文華), Chairman and General Manager of Sanlu and Party Secretary was stripped of her party and functional posts during an extraordinary meeting of the Hebei provincial standing committee of the Communist Party of China; four Shijiazhuang officials, including vice mayor in charge of food and agriculture, Zhang Fawang, were reportedly removed from office.[26][29][30] Mayor Ji Chuntang reportedly resigned on 17 September;[16] Tian was charged under Articles 144 and 150 of the criminal code.[31]

Since Sanlu, the region's largest purchaser of milk, was ordered to halt production, throwing many small dairy farmers into hardship.[32] On 24 September, Fonterra announced that it had written down the carrying value of its investment by NZ$139 million (two-thirds), reflecting the costs of product recall and the impairment of the 'Sanlu' brand "as a direct consequence of the criminal contamination of milk in China".[33][34] Chairman Henry van der Heyden said that the contamination was a criminal act which Fonterra could not have prevented.[33] On 26 September, Fonterra CEO denied that Fonterra is selling its stake of 43% of Shijiazhuang Sanlu Group Co.[35]

Breakup

On 27 September 2008, China Economic Net reported that Sanlu may have been bankrupted and soon be taken over by Beiijng Sanyuan Food Company Ltd..[36] In November, it was announced that the Sanyuan Group would acquire 4 of Sanlu's Shijiazhuang plants, and plants in Tangshan, Shandong and Henan, and would assume some of Sanlu's debt. Consideration was not disclosed, but sum is said to be of the order of ¥ 800 million.[10]

On 19 December, Sanlu secured a loan of ¥902 million to pay medical expenses of and compensation to children affected by tainted milk powder it produced. It was announced on 25 December that Shijiazhuang court accepted a creditor's bankruptcy petition against Sanlu, which reportedly had net debt of ¥1.1 billion. Shijiazhuang city, the controlling shareholder, hopes to sell its distribution network as a going concern.[37]

Trial of executives

Four Sanlu executives went on trial on 31 December 2008 charged with producing and selling fake or substandard products. Tian Wenhua, former general manager, former deputy general managers Wang Yuliang and Hang Zhiqi, and Wu Jusheng, a former head of Sanlu's milk division appeared in court. Tian pleaded guilty to her role in the scandal, and expressed her remorse, and also called for China to consider embracing the European Union's standards on melamine. Wang, who had leaped off a building in a suicide attempt, offered his apology and remorse: "When I think of the children who were harmed ... I feel extreme inadequacy towards these sick children and their parents."[38]

On 22 January 2009, Tian was sentenced to life imprisonment, while other Sanlu executives received sentences of five to fifteen years. Two other men were sentenced to death.[39] Tian was also ordered to pay a fine of 20 million yuan (US$2.9 million). Sanlu was fined 50 million yuan ($7.3 million) despite its bankruptcy.[40]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Sanlu decides to recall melamine-contaminated product, news.163.com (11 September 2008) (Chinese)
  2. ^ "China Melamine Death Toll Rises", BBC (2 December 2008)
  3. ^ Sanlu, company in China milk scandal, declared bankrupt
  4. ^ "Sanlu bankrupt". Stuff.co.nz. NZPA. 24 December 2008. http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/farming/774276. Retrieved 7 November 2011. 
  5. ^ David Barboza, Death Sentences in Chinese Milk Case, New York Times, 22 January 2009
  6. ^ The Sanlu Trial: Diary of a Dairy Disaster, Caijing, 15 January 2009
  7. ^ "Fonterra And San Lu Reach Joint Venture Agreement". Scoop. 2 December 2005. http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU0512/S00032.htm. Retrieved 15 September 2008. 
  8. ^ Fonterra acquires 43% in Sanlu Group, IPO planned, Xinhua (2 December 2005) (Chinese)
  9. ^ Government does not own stake in Sanlu; Sanlu Group responsible for cover-up, Xinhua (3 September 2008) (Chinese)
  10. ^ a b Sanyuan to buy 7 Sanlu dairy plants, China.org.cn, 18 November 2008
  11. ^ 三鹿简介
  12. ^ CCTV In-depth report: Sanlu powder undergoes thousand tests before leaving factory (Chinese)
  13. ^ 央视《每周质量报告》“中国制造”首推三鹿婴幼儿奶粉 (Chinese)
  14. ^ How Sanlu won the national technology award, China Youth Online (9 January 2008) (Chinese)
  15. ^ "Sanlu liquid milk back on Chinese market after melamine scandal". Xinhua. 13 November 2008. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/13/content_10353146.htm. 
  16. ^ a b Death toll rises to four in tainted baby formula scandal in China, Xinhua (18 September 2008)
  17. ^ "Chinese Baby Formula Scandal Widens as 3 Deaths Are Announced". BBC. 17 September 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7620253.stm. Retrieved 16 September 2008. 
  18. ^ China launches crack-down on export milk, The Times
  19. ^ The poisoning of China's babies, Telegraph
  20. ^ a b Klaudia Lee, "NZ alerted China to tainted milk, PM says", Page A1, South China Morning Post (16 September 2008)
  21. ^ "Toxic milk toll rockets in China". BBC News. 15 September 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7616346.stm. Retrieved 18 September 2008. 
  22. ^ Jane Macartney & Sophie Yu, Chinese milk powder contaminated with melamine sickens 1,253 babies, The Times (16 September 2008)
  23. ^ Raymond Li, "Censorship hammer comes down over scandal", Page A5, South China Morning Post (16 September 2008)
  24. ^ Xinhua, "China to destroy 10,000 tons of tainted baby formula", chinaview.cn (15 September 2008)
  25. ^ Xinhua, "China seizes 22 companies with contaminated baby milk powder", chinaview.cn (16 September 2008)
  26. ^ a b Klaudia Lee, "Tests find tainted baby milk at 21 more firms", Page A1, South China Morning Post (17 September 2008)
  27. ^ Lee Spears, "China Revokes 'Inspection-Free' Right as Milk Scandal Spreads", Bloomberg (18 September 2008)
  28. ^ Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine announces list of enterprises involved in Melamine milk, China Central Television (16 September 2008)
  29. ^ Xinhua, "Officials, company manager sacked following baby milk powder scandal", chinaview.cn (16 September 2008)
  30. ^ Lee Spears, China Revokes `Inspection-Free' Right as Milk Scandal Spreads, Bloomberg, (17 September 2008)
  31. ^ MD of Sanlu detained for criminal charges, Hebei.com (17 September 2008) (Chinese)
  32. ^ Gillian Wong, China's dairy farmers fret as milk scandal grows, Associated Press (22 September 2008)
  33. ^ a b Michael Field & Andrew Janes (24 September 2008). "Fonterra takes 69pc SanLu writedown". Business Day. Fairfax Media. http://www.businessday.co.nz/industries/4704082. Retrieved 25 September 2008. 
  34. ^ "China scandal hits Fonterra hard". Stuff (Fairfax Media). 24 September 2008. http://www.stuff.co.nz/4704077a13.html. Retrieved 24 September 2008. 
  35. ^ Oster, Shai; Chao, Loretta; Leow, Jason; Zhang, Jane. "Fonterra: Not Contacted About Sanlu Stake Sale By JASON LEOW". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122242110717678549.html. Retrieved 25 September 2008. 
  36. ^ "Sanyuan may take over tainted milk brand Sanlu". China Daily. 26September 2008. http://en.ce.cn/Business/Enterprise/200809/27/t20080927_16935772.shtml. 
  37. ^ Sharon Lee (26 December 2008). "Sanlu in $160m debt, assets up for grabs". 中国日报 (rednet.com). http://english.rednet.cn/c/2008/12/26/1672784.htm. 
  38. ^ "China milk exec faults lack of rules, awaits verdict". CNN. 2 January 2009. http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/01/01/china.milk/. 
  39. ^ David Barboza, Death Sentences in Chinese Milk Case, New York Times, 22 January 2009
  40. ^ Chinese milk scam duo face death, BBC News, 22 January 2009.