BEIJING, Sept. 12 (Xinhua) -- Chinese product safety
authorities said here Wednesday the latest lab tests in China have shown that
toys recalled by Mattel Inc. for a third time are up to the Chinese and European
standards and are safe for children around the world.
The problem was that the United States imposes a
different measurement of lead content from other countries, the General
Administration for Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (GAQSIQ) said
in a report.
The GAQSIQ said that China and most other countries
determine the safety of toy based on the lead release, or the amount of lead
dissolvable out of toy paint, which may be harmful to human health.
China requires the lead release should be kept under
90 mg per kilogram, which is in line with the international standard (ISO8124-3)
and the European standard (EN 71-3). But the United States adds an extra
standard to limit the lead content to 600 mg per kilogram, the administration
said.
On Sept. 4, the world's largest toy maker Mattel
recalled 848,000 Chinese-made toys, after having recalling toys twice, 85
percent of which are due to design and 15 percent for quality concerns.
The third recalls of China-made toys by Mattel
concerned 675,000 Barbie toys from a toy maker in Shenzhen in the southern
province of Guangdong.
Four types of the total seven types of Barbie it
produces are up to scratch in terms of lead contents under the U.S. standards,
according to the GAQSIQ's preliminary investigation.
Another 90,000 Fisher Price toys from another
Guangdong-based manufacturer were checked by sampling by the GAQSIQ and are also
up to American standards, it said.
The product quality watchdog, however, said it would
make further investigations into the matter as different labs produced "quite
different" results, with some claiming the recalled products were substandard.
As the world's No. 1 toy exporter, China sold 22
billion toys overseas last year, accounting for 60 percent of the world's total.
Difference in standards was a main reason why the
country's exports to some countries were frequently alleged to be problematic in
quality, said the watchdog.