Cereal Safety May Be Sugar-Coated, But Not in the Good Way

The chemical in cereal boxes that led in June to a massive recall by Kellogg Co. has yet to be evaluated for carcinogenicity, prompting health groups to call for more study of packaging materials.

Greenwire reported on Tuesday that recall of 28 million boxes of cereal was caused by the hydrocarbon methylnaphthalene in the plastic packaging, which Kellogg said imparted an “off-flavor and smell” that could cause nausea and diarrhea. Hydrocarbons are byproducts of oil.

“What little we do know about the history of this chemical is checkered at best,” said Dave Andrews, a senior scientist with the Environmental Working Group, which first announced that methylnapthalene was the culprit. “I think it’s important for federal public health agencies like the EPA and FDA to know everything there is to know about the possible risks this fossil fuel could pose to people’s health.”

Citing a lack of data, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have yet to rule on the human carcinogenicity of methylnaphthalene.

Kellogg officials consulted independent toxicologists and chemists, who traced the odd smells and flavors to paraffin wax containing “elevated levels of hydrocarbons, including methylnaphthalene,” Kellogg spokesman J. Adaire Putnam said.

Kellogg declined to state which other hydrocarbons are included in cereal packaging, but said that the paraffin wax was “commonly used as a protective coating for foods including cheese, raw fruits and vegetables.” The elevated hydrocarbon levels were not high enough to be harmful, Putnam added.

Scott Openshaw, a spokesman for the Grocery Manufacturers Association, declined to comment on the Kellogg case, but said ”food and beverage companies all adhere to strict manufacturing practices to assure that food packaging is safe.”

A food safety bill that would empower the Food and Drug Administration to order mandatory recalls has passed the House but is pending in the Senate.

“When foods that are popular among kids are being recalled in large volumes, it is clear that our food safety system is not working,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) said in a statement last month.

Related Links: Kellogg To Stop Making Unproven Claims of Health Benefits

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