FDA warns frozen shrimp from Walmart could be radioactive in recall


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Summary

Toss out frozen shrimp

The FDA urged people who bought Great Value frozen shrimp with the lot codes 8005540-1, 8005538-1 or 8005539-1 and best by date of March 15, 2027, to throw away the product.

13 states affected

Walmart said the recall covers Great Value frozen shrimp sold in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia.

Radioactive material

Cs-137 is a radioisotope produced by nuclear fission for use in medical devices and gauges, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.


Full story

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a recall alert for certain frozen shrimp sold at Walmart stores after a processor’s shipment was flagged for having radioactive material. The agency said no product has tested positive, but issued the notice as a precaution. 

Certain bags of frozen shrimp Walmart sold under its Great Value brand were recalled Tuesday after U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) notified the FDA that the processor’s most recent shipment had Cs-137, a radioactive isotope of the element cesium, the FDA said in the alert.

Cesium is a soft, flexible and silvery-white metal that becomes liquid near room temperature, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

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“Although testing to date has not confirmed the presence of contamination in any product in commerce,” the FDA said, “the product appears to have been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby it may have become contaminated with Cs-137 and may pose a safety concern.”

According to Walmart, the recall affects Great Value frozen shrimp sold in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia. 

Testing hasn’t revealed that the contaminated food was sold, but the FDA said Walmart received raw frozen shrimp after the first date of detection, warranting the recall. 

People who bought frozen Great Value shrimp with lot codes 8005540-1, 8005538-1 or 8005539-1 and had a best by date of March 15, 2027, should toss out the product. 

The CBP first detected the radiation levels at ports in Los Angeles, Houston, Miami and Savannah, Georgia. Products came from processor PT. Bahari Makmur Sejati, or BMS Foods, of Indonesia. Customs denied BMS Foods’ other shipments from entering the U.S.

Is cesium dangerous? 

Cesium can be fatal if ingested, according to the EPA. But the Food and Drug Administration said the metal is a radioisotope man-made through nuclear reactions and is available worldwide. It can be found in food, soil and the air. 

The EPA said the chemical is one of the byproducts of nuclear fission processes in nuclear reactors and weapons testing. It can be found in radiation therapy devices for cancer treatments, gauges that detect liquid flow through pipes and industrial devices that detect thicknesses of materials like paper. 

“Exposure to such a large amount could come from the mishandling of a strong industrial source of Cs-137, a nuclear detonation or a major nuclear accident,” according to the EPA. “Large amounts of Cs-137 are not found in the environment under normal circumstances.” 

A sample of breaded shrimp had detectable levels of the radioactive material. The FDA said it could be a health concern if consumed over an extended period of time, combined with radiation from other sources like medical procedures.

Long-term exposure to low doses can cause cancer. External exposure to the material at high doses can cause burns, acute radiation sickness or death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Avoiding products like the shipment FDA tested with similar levels of Cs-137 is a measure intended to reduce exposure to low-level radiation that could have health impacts with continued exposure over a long period of time,” the agency said.

BMS Foods on red list

BMS Foods joined the FDA’s red list on Aug. 14 after the agency learned foods were being prepared, packed or stored in unsanitary conditions that prompted the detection of cesium. As a result, all of the processor’s shrimp products will be denied entry. 

A company can be removed from the FDA’s red list if it can demonstrate that the problems that led to the violation have been resolved. That can involve documenting the root cause of the violation and identifying all potential sources and corrective actions; drafting a food safety plan; correcting problems the FDA or otherwise competent authorities alerted; and having all submitted materials verified.

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Why this story matters

A federal advisory warning about possible radioactive contamination in Walmart's frozen shrimp highlights food safety monitoring, regulatory action and public health risks linked to global supply chains.

Food safety

The alert underscores the critical role of regulators in detecting and preventing contaminated foods from reaching consumers, protecting public health against accidental exposure to hazardous materials.

Regulatory oversight

Authorities such as the FDA and CBP acted quickly, emphasizing the importance of ongoing oversight and swift recalls when unsafe conditions or contaminants are detected in imported food.

Public health communication

Clear guidance from agencies and retailers about the risks and actions to take in case of contamination helps inform and protect consumers, while also drawing attention to long-term risks of low-level exposure.

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Context corner

Cesium-137 is a radioactive isotope resulting from nuclear fission in reactors and weapons testing, often found in trace amounts worldwide from past atmospheric nuclear events. Food recalls for radioactive contamination are rare but not unprecedented in U.S. regulatory history.

Debunking

Authorities confirm that no shrimp testing positive for Cesium-137 entered U.S. commerce, and all contaminated products or shipments identified have been denied entry. The FDA recall is a precautionary measure rather than a response to confirmed product contamination in stores.

Global impact

Internationally, this story affects seafood import-export relations, particularly with Indonesia, as the shrimp supplier faces an import ban while the FDA and Indonesian authorities work to determine the contamination source and prevent future occurrences.

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