Kuwait Times

US govt roasted over proposal to reclassify potatoes

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When is a vegetable not a vegetable? When it’s a potato, according to a new US government proposal to reclassify the starchy staple that has infuriated lawmakers in rural districts.

US senators Susan Collins and Michael Bennet — a Maine Republican and a Colorado Democrat — are spearheadi­ng a bid to convince government officials to back away from plans to call the root vegetable a grain, a move they fear would hurt farming. “Since the inception of the US Department of Agricultur­e, it has classified potatoes correctly as a vegetable,” Collins and Bennet said in a letter to both the USDA and the Department of Health and Human Services.

The proposals for stripping the potato of its “vegetable” status appear in the forthcomin­g Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2025 – 2030, produced jointly by the two department­s. Americans eat more potatoes than any other vegetable — 50 pounds per person per year, according to USDA figures — although almost half of those come in frozen form, for example as fries.

Nutritioni­sts painted a grim picture of the country’s consumptio­n habits in a 2019 government study, estimating that just a tenth of adults eat enough vegetables. And experts disagree on whether potatoes should count toward an individual’s vegetable intake, as they are high in carbohydra­tes, which can cause spikes in blood sugar levels.

The senators pointed to a 2013 National Library of Medicine study that asserted that potatoes “should be included in the vegetable group because they contribute critical nutrients.” “There is no debate about the physical characteri­stics of the potato and its horticultu­ral scientific classifica­tion. Unlike grains, white potatoes are strong contributo­rs of potassium, calcium, vitamin C, vitamin B6, and fiber,” they argued.

The senators said a change in the classifica­tion would confuse consumers, retailers, restaurate­urs and growers. Potato farming contribute­s $540 million in annual sales to the economy of Collins’s state, according to online publicatio­n The Maine Wire, with 6,100 jobs linked to the industry. — AFP

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