:. Food Industry News

Categories: Food Safety

Cadbury Withdraws China Chocolate on Melamine Concern

Source: Reuters
29/09/2008

Hong Kong/London, Sept 29 - British confectionery group Cadbury Plc said on Monday it was withdrawing all of its 11 chocolate products made in Beijing on concern over the possibility of contamination with melamine in its Chinese plant.

Daily News Alerts

The London-based group said its products, including Dairy Milk chocolate, were being recalled from mainland China and the export markets of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Australia as a precautionary step pending further supply of fresh product.

A growing list of Chinese milk and milk-related products have been taken off shelves around the world in recent weeks after it came to light that some milk had been contaminated with melamine which led to thousands affected and four deaths.

Melamine is a relatively cheap industrial chemical that can be used to cheat protein quality checks in milk and a week ago the Chinese health ministry said 104 people were seriously ill and close to 40,000 others were affected by contaminated milk.

"The withdrawal is due to concern about the possibility of melamine contamination in our chocolate," said a Cadbury spokesman based at its London headquarters.

Last week Cadbury said three factories from which it sources its dairy ingredient supplies in China had been tested by the government and no melamine had been found, but further tests had revealed some doubts so the recall was ordered.

"We believe it is appropriate to take a precautionary step to withdraw from the market all of our Cadbury chocolate products that have been manufactured in Beijing, pending further supply of fresh product," the group said in a statement.

Cadbury shares were off 0.9 percent at 577 pence by 0950 GMT in a London stock market down 2.7 percent.

The products include a range of Cadbury's chocolate lines and Choclairs made in Beijing, although only one line - Cadbury Eclairs - was sold in Australia. Cadbury's Chinese business is small with sales of less than 0.5 percent of group revenue.

A year ago Cadbury was fined 1 million pounds for selling unsafe chocolates in Britain and Ireland during a salmonella health scare which left a number of people ill.

In Hong Kong the government's Centre for Food Safety (CFS) appealed to the public to stop eating the chocolates concerned and said its laboratories would check the products for melamine.

"We would alert the trade to stop selling the affected products. The Centre would test the related products. We are closely monitoring the situation," the CFS said.

Among other western food groups with operations in China, the world's biggest food group Nestle and France's Danone said all their products have been cleared by Chinese authorities, while Unilever Plc/NV said all its milk powder for its Chinese Walls ice cream operation was sourced outside China.



GO   View more articles on this subject

Email This Article To A Colleague     Print A Copy Of This Page
 
 
 
 
FLEXNEWS - Business News for the Food Industry

About Us | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy
 
Daily News Alerts
Related Items
Chinese Kids on Melamine Milk Develop Crystals - WHO...
Quarter of Beijing Babies Drank Tainted Milk - Survey...
China Burns Milk Products in Giant Furnaces
China Reviews Tougher Laws Amid Milk Scandal
China Says Govt Must Share Blame for Milk Scandal
China's Milk Heartland Fights to Reclaim Trust
Arla Foods: Milk Powder Production Resumes in China
China Milk Scandal Companies Apologize
Thai FDA Response to Melamine in Chinese Dairy Products
China Threatens to "Out" Tainted Milk Offenders...

More in Food Industry News
US Coffee Roasters Try Growing the Beans They Sell
Mexico's Comerci to Offer Debt Restructuring Plan
Brazil, Thailand Challenge U.S. Import Measures
Russia's Wimm-Bill-Dann in Talks over $180 Mln Bank...
EU-Australia Wine Trade Agreement Signed
Ireland: Carbery Launches Legal Action Against Carbon...
Dow Introduces New Plant-based Technology Enabling...
China to Open Anti-trust Probe into Coca-Cola's Bid...
Panrico Among Finalists for SOS Biscuits Arm
China Raises Death Estimate from Tainted Milk to Six

Top Headlines
Brazil, Thailand Challenge U.S. Import Measures
Russia's Wimm-Bill-Dann in Talks over $180 Mln Bank...
EU-Australia Wine Trade Agreement Signed
Vietnam Aims to Avoid Coffee Expansion in 2009
Carrefour Plans More French "Carrefour" Brand...
Ireland: Carbery Launches Legal Action Against Carbon...
Dow Introduces New Plant-based Technology Enabling...
China to Open Anti-trust Probe into Coca-Cola's Bid...
Panrico Among Finalists for SOS Biscuits Arm
China Raises Death Estimate from Tainted Milk to Six
Mondavi-inspired Wine Center Files for Bankruptcy
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts to Invest $100 Million in Chinese...
Unilever Reshapes its Global Research & Development
SIA Unit to Buy Singapore Food for S$478 Million
UK: Real Good Food Warns on Profit Again
Tesco Preparing for Tougher Times Ahead
Brown-Forman to Divest Italian Wines
DeMet's Candy Company Acquires the Treasures and Stixx...
Canada Greens File Complaint on Nestle Water Ads
Saputo Completes the Acquisition of the Activities...
Solae Announces Global Price Increase for Soy Ingredients
Colruyt Issues Interim Financial Report; Revenues Rise...
UK: Bidders Circle Troubled Woolworths
Ardo Confirms Take-Over of Austria Frost
Carrefour Still Planning Indian Joint Ventures
Improved Infant Formula, Aroma Composition for Use...
Co-Precipitated Carrageenan/Xanthan Gum Compositions...


 


FLEXNEWS 2008 - All rights reserved
ISSN 1950-6228