-
Advertisement
Hong Kong

Prepacked lies: 90 per cent of food sold short

And it may just be tip of iceberg, says Consumer Council after survey shows meat, fish, vegetables and fruit did not match weight on label

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A pack of steak weighed about 20 per cent less than the net weight on the label. Photo: EPA
Ernest Kao

Grocery shoppers have been told to be on the alert after 90 per cent of prepacked food was found to fall short of its labelled weight in a Consumer Council study.

The council examined 51 samples of meat, fish, vegetables and fruit sold by weight at various Hong Kong Island retailers last month.

The worst case involved a beef steak purchased at an unnamed retailer. The label said it had a net weight of 299.4 grams, but the actual net weight was 241.9g - a discrepancy of almost 20 per cent.

Advertisement

One pack of fish was found to have been sold at nearly 17 per cent more than its actual weight.

Council vice-chairman Philip Leung Kwong-hon said traders selling prepackaged goods without giving the actual net weight were in breach of the Weights and Measures Ordinance.

Advertisement

"The incidence … found in this survey is believed to possibly be the tip of the iceberg," Leung added.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x