April 19, 2024
2 mins read

Nestle Baby Food Study Rattles India, Shares Dip

The Indian government is reportedly looking into the issue of sugar being added to baby food…reports Asian Lite News

The baby-food brands sold by global giant Nestle in India contain high levels of added sugar, unlike the same products in the UK, Germany Switzerland, and other developed nations, revealed an investigation by Swiss organisation Public Eye and the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN), sparking concern in the country at the violation of health guidelines.

The Indian government is reportedly looking into the issue of sugar being added to baby food.

Meanwhile, the share price of Nestle India Ltd went down in the bourses on Thursday following the study.

At the BSE, on Thursday, Nestle India’s shares opened at Rs 2,539 (Wednesday closing price Rs 2,547.15) and went down to close at Rs.2,462.75.

Findings showed that in India, all Cerelac baby products contain an average of nearly 3 grams of sugar per serving. The same product is being sold with no added sugar in Germany and the UK, while in Ethiopia and Thailand, it contains nearly 6 grams, the study said.

The report said that Nestle adds sugar to infant milk and cereal products in several countries which is a violation of international guidelines aimed at preventing obesity and chronic diseases. Violations were found only in Asian, African, and Latin American countries.

However, a Nestle India Ltd spokesperson said the company has reduced the total amount of added sugars in its infant cereals portfolio by 30 per cent over the past five years and it continues to “review” and “reformulate” products to reduce them further. “We believe in the nutritional quality of our products for early childhood and prioritise using high-quality ingredients.”

On Wednesday, the leading UK paper The Guardian reported that the Swiss food giant adds sugar and honey to infant milk and cereal products sold in “poorer countries”. It cited data from Public Eye and IBFAN that examined Nestle baby food brands sold in these markets. Public Eye examined 115 products sold in Nestle’s main markets in Africa, Asia and Latin America across two key brands — Cerelac and Nodi.

In India, all Cerelac baby cereal products examined by Public Eye contained added sugar — on average nearly 3 gm per serving.

“Almost all the Cerelac infant cereals examined contain added sugar — nearly 4 grams per serving on average, equal to roughly a sugar cube — although they are targeted at babies from six months of age. The highest amount — 7.3 grams per serving — was detected in a product sold in the Philippines,” the report said.

WHO expert Nigel Rollins was cited in media reports as saying that “this is a double standard that cannot be justified.”

ALSO READ: IMF Pins Global Growth Hopes on India

Previous Story

Altos India amps up ‘Make in India’ with high-end tech

Next Story

realme Set to Shake up Market

Latest from Business

PM Modi: India poised to lead next tech wave

PM Modi underscored that the country is poised to lead the next wave of digital transformation in 5G…reports Asian Lite News Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday hailed India’s progress in expanding

India Hits 100GW Solar

The expansion is not only in scale but also in quality, with significant capacity dedicated to high-efficiency modules. Many manufacturers have adopted vertically integrated operations, enhancing quality, reducing costs, and improving resilience

Jewellery Exports Shine Bright

The GJEPC noted that product diversification has played a major role in sustaining momentum. Lightweight and contemporary designs are gaining traction among younger global consumers, helping Indian jewellers appeal to a wider

China Curbs Hit India’s Electronics Boom

The ICEA noted this results in delays, inefficiencies, and higher costs — alternatives from Japan or Korea cost up to four times more than Chinese machinery. India’s transformation into a global electronics
Go toTop

Don't Miss

3-day India-Bangladesh festival to be held in October

Chief Ministers of north-eastern states and several Union Ministers along

ISI’s Smuggling Network and Its Links to Khalistan Movement Exposed

This smuggling network has allegedly fueled the Khalistan movement and