The Borneo Post

Nutella maker fights back on palm oil after cancer risk study

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ALBA, ITALY: The US$44 billion palm oil industry, under pressure in Europe after authoritie­s listed the edible oil as a cancer risk, has found a vocal ally in the food sector: the maker of Nutella.

Italian confection­ery firm Ferrero has taken a public stand in defence of an ingredient that some other food companies in the country are boycotting.

It has launched an advertisin­g campaign to assure the public about the safety of Nutella, its flagship product which makes up about a fifth of its sales.

The hazelnut and chocolate spread, one of Italy’s best-known food brands and a popular breakfast treat for children, relies on palm oil for its smooth texture and shelf life.

Other substitute­s, such as sunflower oil, would change its character, according to Ferrero.

“Making Nutella without palm oil would produce an inferior substitute for the real product, it would be a step backward,” Ferrero’s purchasing manager Vincenzo Tapella told Reuters.

He features in a TV commercial aired in Italy over the past three months that has drawn criticism from some politician­s.

Any move away from palm oil would also have economic implicatio­ns as it is the cheapest vegetable oil, costing around US$800 a tonne, compared with US$845 for sunflower oil and US$920 for rapeseed oil, another possible substitute.

Ferrero uses about 185,000 tonnes of palm oil a year, so replacing it with those substitute­s could cost the firm an extra US$8-22 million annually, at those prices. The company declined to comment on these calculatio­ns.

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) said in May that palm oil generated more of a potentiall­y carcinogen­ic contaminan­t than other vegetable oils when refined at temperatur­es above 200 degrees Celsius.

It did not, however, recommend consumers stop eating it and said further study was needed to assess the level of risk.

The detailed research into the contaminan­t – known as GE – was commission­ed by the European Commission in 2014 after an EFSA study the year before, into substances generated during industrial refining, identified it as being potentiall­y harmful.

EFSA does not have the power to make regulation­s, though the issue is under review by the European Commission.

The spokesman for Health and Food Safety, Enrico Brivio, said guidance would be issued by the end of this year. Measures could include regulation­s to limit the level of GE in food products, but there will not be a ban on the use of palm oil, he added.

The World Health Organizati­on and the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on flagged the same potential risk that EFSA had warned of regarding GE, but did not recommend consumers stop eating palm oil.

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion also has not banned the use of palm oil in food.

The issue became a hot consumer topic in Italy after the largest supermarke­t chain, Coop, boycotted palm oil in all its ownbrand products following the EFSA study, describing the move as a ‘precaution’. Italy’s biggest baker, Barilla, also eliminated it and put ‘palm oil-free’ labels on its wares.

The retailers’ decisions followed pressure from activists, including Italy’s main farming associatio­n Coldiretti and online food magazine Il Fatto Alimentare, which called on all food firms to stop using palm oil.

High temperatur­es are used to remove palm oil’s natural red colour and neutralise its smell, but Ferrero says it uses an industrial process that combines a temperatur­e of just below 200C and extremely low pressure to minimise contaminan­ts. — Reuters

 ??  ?? The logo of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) at its headquarte­rs in Vienna, Austria. Oil prices fell sharply for the second straight session on nervousnes­s about the OPEC agreement to cut output. — Reuters photo
The logo of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) at its headquarte­rs in Vienna, Austria. Oil prices fell sharply for the second straight session on nervousnes­s about the OPEC agreement to cut output. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? The US$44 billion palm oil industry, under pressure in Europe after authoritie­s listed the edible oil as a cancer risk, has found a vocal ally in the food sector: the maker of Nutella. — Reuters photo
The US$44 billion palm oil industry, under pressure in Europe after authoritie­s listed the edible oil as a cancer risk, has found a vocal ally in the food sector: the maker of Nutella. — Reuters photo

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