Fonterra's botulism scandal was one of the "greatest gifts" the company could have given to a Chinese Government that's focused on rebuilding its domestic dairy industry, according to a visiting foreign correspondent.
Jamil Anderlini, the Beijing bureau chief for London's Financial Times newspaper, was in Auckland this week for the China Business Summit.
In his address at the event, he pointed out the contamination scare began roughly a month after the Chinese Government launched an investigation into baby formula price fixing by foreign dairy companies in China, including Fonterra and French food giant Danone.
It also came just a few months after the new Chinese administration, which took power in March, announced a major strategy aimed at rebuilding and creating "national champions" in its domestic infant formula industry, which was decimated by the 2008 melamine scandal that killed six babies and sickened thousands more.
Following the scandal, sales of imported formula grew rapidly.