Campaigners are calling for a ban on a colouring linked to cancer which has been found in Coca-Cola sold in Britain.
A
chemical in the caramel colouring that gives the drink its distinctive
colour has been at the centre of a health alert in the United States.
Coca-Cola
has recently switched to a new manufacturing process in America to
bring down the level of the suspect chemical, 4-methylimidazole (4-MI).
But this precaution has not yet been
taken in other countries such as Britain, where its products are the
nation’s biggest selling soft drinks with sales of £1.1billion a year.
The
amount of 4-MI found in regular Coca-Cola cans sold in Britain was 135
micrograms – some 34 times higher than the 4mcg level in the US,
according to research by the US group Center For Science In The Public
Interest in partnership with Britain’s Children’s Food Campaign.
Health
authorities in California are so concerned that they have passed a law
that requires any can of drink containing a 4-MI reading of 30mcg or
more to carry a health warning. If this safety assessment was applied in
Britain, all cans of Coke would have to carry a warning.
The contaminant results from the
industrial process, involving ammonia, that creates the caramel
colouring. Chemical reactions between sugar and the ammonia result in
the formation of 4-MI, which has been found to cause cancers in
laboratory tests with mice and rats.
The
results of the campaigners’ research are to be published in the
International Journal Of Occupational And Environmental Health, and
today they will write to British health ministers calling for an
outright ban on the colouring.
Malcolm
Clark, campaign co-ordinator at the lobby group, said: ‘Coca-Cola seems
to be treating its UK consumers with disdain. The company should
respect the health of all of its customers around the world, by using
caramel colouring that is free of known cancer-causing chemicals.
The UK Government must regulate to
protect public health from companies that aggressively market
sugar-laden drinks that lead to obesity, diabetes and tooth decay.’
Manufacturers
say it is possible to provide a caramel colour that is totally free of
4-MI, however it is four times more expensive.
The CSPI examined regular Coca-Cola
from around the world. In the US the 4-MI level was 4mcg per 355ml. The
figure was higher in every other country, from 56 in China to 267 in
Brazil. Diet Coke and Coke Zero were not included, but earlier tests
suggest they tend to have one third less of the contaminant than the
standard drink.
The
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment in California, which
made the warning labels law, said: ‘Studies published in 2007 by the
federal government’s National Toxicology Program showed that long-term
exposure to 4-MI resulted in increases in lung cancer in male and female
mice.’
California’s experts suggest that
regular consumption of 4-MI at its warning label level of 30mcg would
cause cancer in one in 100,000 people over their lifetimes.
Coca-Cola strenuously denies there is any human health risk from 4-MI.
It
said the decision to change the manufacturing process in the US, made
public in March, was to avoid the need to apply ‘scientifically
unfounded’ health warnings to cans and bottles.
The
British arm of the company said it will change the caramel colouring
used in its drinks in this country, but was unable to put a timescale on
it.
It said: ‘We intend to
expand the use of the reduced 4-MI caramel globally as this will allow
us to streamline and simplify our supply chain, manufacturing, and
distribution systems.’
The British Soft Drinks Association said there was no need to ban caramel colours containing 4-MI.
A
spokesman said: ‘The 4-MI levels found in food and drink products pose
no health or safety risks. Outside the state of California, no
regulatory agency in the world considers the exposure of the public to
4-MI as present in caramels as an issue.’
The
spokesman and Coke said food safety watchdogs in Britain and Europe
have both decided the presence of 4-MI in caramel colouring is not a
health concern.
source : Daily Mail
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