Montreal Gazette

Coffee shops must post cancer warnings: California judge

- BRIAN MELLEY

Coffee sellers in California LOS ANGELES should have to post warnings because the brew may contain an ingredient that’s been linked to cancer, a judge has ruled.

The culprit is a chemical produced in the bean roasting process that is a known carcinogen and has been at the heart of an eight-year legal struggle between a tiny nonprofit group and Big Coffee.

The Council for Education and Research on Toxics wanted the coffee industry to remove acrylamide from its processing — like potato chip makers did when it sued them years ago — or disclose the danger in ominous warning signs or labels. The industry, led by Starbucks Corp., said the level of the chemical in coffee isn’t harmful and any risks are outweighed by benefits.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Elihu Berle said Wednesday that the coffee makers hadn’t presented the proper grounds at trial to prevail.

“While plaintiff offered evidence that consumptio­n of coffee increases the risk of harm to the fetus, to infants, to children and to adults, defendants’ medical and epidemiolo­gy experts testified that they had no opinion on causation,” Berle wrote in his proposed ruling. “Defendants failed to satisfy their burden of proving ... that consumptio­n of coffee confers a benefit to human health.”

The suit was brought against Starbucks and 90 companies under a law passed by California voters in 1986 that has been credited with culling cancer-causing chemicals from myriad products and also criticized for leading to quick settlement shakedowns.

Scientific evidence on coffee has gone back and forth for a long time, but concerns have eased recently about possible dangers of coffee, with some studies finding health benefits.

 ?? RICHARD VOGEL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? A court ruling in California states that coffee companies must post cancer warnings because of a chemical produced in the roasting process. Starbucks and other coffee companies failed to show that the health threat was insignific­ant.
RICHARD VOGEL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE A court ruling in California states that coffee companies must post cancer warnings because of a chemical produced in the roasting process. Starbucks and other coffee companies failed to show that the health threat was insignific­ant.

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