China Cracks Down on 'Ghost Kitchens' Amid Food Safety Concerns
L'essentiel
China is tightening regulations on food delivery apps, requiring verification of restaurant licenses and addresses to combat "ghost kitchens." These virtual eateries, operating without physical storefronts, have raised food safety alarms, leading to fines and new rules mandating that online listings match real locations.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
China's food delivery sector is highly competitive, leading to practices like 'ghost kitchens' which operate without physical storefronts and have raised food safety concerns. A complaint about a cake from a chain with nearly 380 online locations but no physical stores prompted a wider investigation.
China's food delivery apps will now have to verify restaurants' licences and operating addresses, as authorities crack down on thousands of "ghost kitchens" that have raised food safety fears.
"Ghost kitchens" refer to takeaway merchants on food delivery platforms with no physical shop fronts. These have come under scrutiny recently for operating often without a licence.
According to new rules that took effect on Monday, shop listings on food delivery apps will need to match physical stores, and vendors have to indicate if they do not offer dine-in services.
The scrutiny of "ghost kitchens" came about last year, after a man in Beijing lodged a complaint to local authorities over an unsatisfactory cake - topped with inedible flowers - he had ordered from a food delivery app, state media reported.
Officials found that the cake chain he had ordered from listed nearly 380 locations on major e-commerce platforms but did not have a single physical store. Its online shops also used forged business licences.
Further investigation revealed that cakes ordered from the stores were outsourced to an order-transfer platform, where food orders were awarded to third-party vendors with the lowest bids.
Authorities found a total of 3.6 million cake orders across two order-transfer platforms, state news agency Xinhua reported.
They also recorded 67,000 "ghost shops" across seven major food delivery platforms, which together with the order-transfer sites "formed an illegal supply chain through mutual collusion", Xinhua reported.
Food delivery platforms were complicit in these arrangements, the report added. "If we're too strict in our review, the merchants would go to other platforms," a staff member from one delivery app reportedly told officials.
China's food delivery sector is characterised by competition so fierce that it has alarmed the authorities.
Last year, a price war among major delivery apps led the government to warn against such a race to the bottom. And bearing the brunt of ever-speedier takeouts are delivery riders scrambling to meet tight deadlines for a pittance.
In April, the State Administration for Market Regulation said that they have fined seven e-commerce platforms - including Taobao, JD.com, Meituan and Pinduoduo - a total of 3.6 billion yuan ($530m; £400m), mostly over ghost deliveries.
As the campaign against "ghost kitchens" continue, merchants themselves have taken steps to assure consumers of food safety.
According to a Xinhua report, more than 20 takeout stalls in the eastern city of Hangzhou have installed "transparent kitchens" with live broadcasting features, allowing consumers to view food preparation in real time.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Further enforcement actions and fines against non-compliant platforms and merchants.
Très probable · En quelques mois
Consolidation within the food delivery market as smaller 'ghost kitchens' struggle to meet new requirements.
Probable · Moyen terme
Introduction of more 'transparent kitchen' initiatives by restaurants to build consumer trust.
Probable · Moyen terme
Questions ouvertes
- What will be the long-term impact of these regulations on the food delivery market share?
- How effectively will authorities enforce these new rules across all platforms?
- Will the cost of compliance lead to higher prices for consumers?
- What further measures will be taken to ensure food safety in the sector?






