Dayton Daily News

Nature Valley drops ‘natural’ claim after suit

- By Deena Shanker

General Mills Inc.’s Nature Valley bars will no longer bear the “Made with 100% Natural Whole Grain Oats” label, after the company settled a lawsuit by consumer groups alleging the snack contained glyphosate-a pesticide better known as RoundUp.

General Mills, which confirmed the change, sold $985.1 million worth of the brand’s snack bars last year, making it the U.S. top seller in that category, according to data from Euromonito­r.

The alleged presence of the chemical made the label deceptive, the consumer groups argued in their complaint. RoundUp is big agricultur­e’s most popular pesticide. The consumer groups alleged that laboratory testing had found traces of the chemical in Nature Valley bars. General Mills hasn’t commented on that claim.

“In a perfect world, we’d like to see food companies stop using these chemicals,” said Katherine Paul of the Organic Consumers Associatio­nA, one of the plaintiffs. “In the short term, one way we believe to help put the pressure on corporatio­ns in general is to hold them accountabl­e for the way they label and advertise their products.”

Paul’s group has previously sued over the alleged presence of RoundUp in products that include Post Holdings Inc.’s Shredded Wheat, a case that was also settled confidenti­ally while resulting in a label change, and Ben & Jerry’s ice creams, a pending case.

Earlier this month, a San Francisco jury handed up a $289 million verdict against Monsanto Co., the maker of RoundUp, in favor of a man who argued that exposure to the chemical had caused his non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Bayer AG, which acquired Monsanto, said it will appeal.

“Nature Valley is confident in the accuracy of its label,” General Mills said in a statement in which it didn’t admit or deny any wrongdoing.

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