Tag: Sprite

  • How Sprite is helping Gen-z cool down with the ‘Heat Happens’ campaign

    How Sprite is helping Gen-z cool down with the ‘Heat Happens’ campaign

    In demonstrating how it is helping people remain refreshed during stressful periods, Sprite, the lemon-lime-flavored beverage from the stables of Coca-Cola Nigeria, is helping consumers stay chilled with the “Heat Happens” campaign.  

    The Sprite “Heat Happens” campaign is an initiative aimed at encouraging young people to stay true to themselves and face unexpected challenges in life with a refreshing and positive attitude.  

    Yusuf Murtala, Marketing Director, Coca-Cola Nigeria noted, “The campaign showcases how life is full of unexpected challenges and “heated” moments, but with a refreshing Sprite, you can stay cool, refreshed and reinvigorated. Whether standing in a long queue on a hot day; eating a spicy meal; studying for an important exam or spending hours in traffic on a hot day, we all have stressful days when it seems like we’re losing our cool”.  

    He emphasized the need to unwind by unplugging one from life’s endless troubles by simply taking time off the physical or mental stressors by relaxing with a Sprite drink. “We want our consumers to know that a chilled bottle of Sprite is never far away to help them keep their cool when life gets tough,” said Murtala.  

    To drive home the message of the campaign, the brand is launching several ads and experiential activities to demonstrate how the drink helps comes in handy in stressful situations. For instance, while at branded suya spots enjoying the popular street food or waiting to catch a bus at a bus station, or studying for an exam, there are chilled bottles of Sprite to remind you to cool your burning tongue and douse the heat and tension and remained focused.  

    Sprite is also helping Nigerian students cool off with a high-energy tour campus tour that kicked off at the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos. The tour’s first leg saw the electrifying performances of top Afrobeats artists who thrilled the crowd with their latest chart-toppers. Additionally, aspiring talents had the opportunity to showcase their skills, with some emerging victorious and walking away with generous cash prizes.  

    Read Also: NAFDAC alerts on contaminated Sprite 50cl drink

    The tour will continue to captivate audiences as it makes its way to various renowned educational institutions in Nigeria. Schedules include the Federal University of Agriculture Abeokuta, (FUNAAB), the University of Port Harcourt (UniPort), the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (NAU), the University of Nigeria Nsukka, (UNN), the University of Ilorin (Uni Ilorin), the University of Calabar (UniCal), the University of Benin (UniBen) and the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU).  

    Students from these institutions can look forward to an unforgettable experience filled with excitement and entertainment.  

    Popular Gen-Z creators, Asherkine, Newton Utere, Moymo, and Ruru, are also in on the action, taking to their pages to show their fans that Sprite has become a constant companion as they deal with their own “heat” moments.  

  • Guinness, Sprite back Carnival to set Suya record

    Guinness, Sprite back Carnival to set Suya record

    In its quest to set a world record of world’s longest Suya/Steak of 50ft, top brands like Sprite and Guinness Nigeria have thrown their weights behind the Lagos City Suya Carnival scheduled for October 1, 2017.

    The record which is first in this category will see a procesion move through Awolowo way in Ikeja with a VIP session at the Ikeja City Mall car park.

    According to the executive producer of the carnival, Kehinde Talabi, the carnival which is organised in conjunction with the Lagos State Ministry of Tourism Arts and Culture is in commemoration of the Lagos at 50 celebrations.

    The event is also in conjunction with the Guinness Book of World Record in Lagos, Nigeria.

    Talabi while assuring security added that the event will bring so many people together and afford opportunities for small businesses to showcase themselves.

    The event’s producer, Mr Timothy Nostradamus said that the event will take a three-course shape. The first will be a morning session of yoga, spa and other exercises at the carnival ground. The second will be the carnival proper and the kick off of the grilling of the 50ft long Suya steak on the carnival ground. And the third session holds at Quilox night club, Victoria Island.

    Also, Mr Damilola Odujinrin, the Experiential Execution Excellence Manager at Nigerian Bottling Company said the reason Sprite has endorsed the carnival is that of the belief in the landmark achievement while supporting the Lagos State government.

    “We are always willing to support indigenous events as well as Lagos State. For us, we have carefully carried out a food test, which revealed that Suya goes down well with Sprite. The feeling consumers get after eating suya and drinking Sprite is better felt than imagined,” Odujinrin said.

    The Lagos City Suya Carnival is organised by Suya Stops in conjunction with Lagos State Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture.

  • CPC affirms Fanta’s and Sprite’s compliance with Benzoic standards

    Independent laboratory analyses and investigations carried out by the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) have confirmed that Fanta and Sprite are fit for human consumption and within the Nigerian Industrial Standards (NIS) limits of benzoic acid and sunset yellow.

    Making this disclosure recently at a news conference at the Council’s Abuja Headquarters, the Director General, of the Consumer Protection Council, Mrs. Dupe Atoki, said that the levels of two additives, benzoic acid and sunset yellow, which raised public apprehension in the consumption of soft drinks because of the action at the Lagos High Court have been confirmed through laboratory analysis to be within the Nigerian Industrial Standards (NIS) limits.

    She disclosed that National Agency for Food, Drug Administration Control, NAFDAC, and Standard Organisations of Nigeria, SON, have been informed about the outcome of the investigation, and that the Council has also recommended regulatory action and review of the ”benzoic acid limits in soft drinks as the current standard, which has been in existence since 2008 is overdue for review,” particularly with the requirement for reviews pegged for every five years.

    The Director General explained that because of the high level of benzoic acid found in isolated cases of Mirinda and Lucozade tested, the Council has called for further regulatory investigative analysis, action and review in the levels of the additive in the products.

    On sunset yellow, she pointed out that the Council has also recommended “regulatory action for a review of the standard as some countries have already reduced the approved limit, while some have labelling requirements for its use, and some others have adopted its outright ban.”

  • Coca-cola, Fanta, Sprite, sodium benzoate and vitamin C

    There are some wise saying which keep ringing in my ears every day. One of them is… ‘everything false will inevitably collapse someday’. Another is … ‘A wise man does not plunge for a swim in a vexious sea spewing tsunamis’, yet another says … ‘everything must become new’. I saw glimpses of them all in the thunderbolt judgment of a Lagos High Court three weeks ago. The first impression which hit me from a summary of the judge’s decision was that Coca-Cola, Fanta and Sprite were preserved with chemical substances which were dangerous to health, and NAFDAC, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, was negligent on not warning the public about this. I didn’t believe the news flash at first. It wasn’t that I didn’t know that the so-called “soft drink”, like all processed foods and drinks, were dangerous to health. The question was: Who would tell this king that his mother was a witch?

    In Alternative medicine chats, it was always reasoned that whoever lifted a finger against these products in public would be “eliminated” by international capital.

    Even in the United States the Food and Drugs Administration (FDA), equivalent of Nigeria’s NAFDAC, is in the pockets of Big Pharma and the giant food and agriculture concerns. And until recently, they funded medical practice in all sorts of ways to get medical opinion on their side. Dr. Robert Atkins, who would not agree to be pocketed, was ostracised. No radio or television station would grant him exposure. Newspapers and magazines distanced themselves from him in order not to damage their friendship with the food and drugs industry which brings them millions of dollars every year in advertisement income.

    In the end, Dr. Atkins became a publisher and published his own books because no publisher would agree to publish them for him.

    Back to Nigeria, someone asked me last week what I thought would now happen to Coca-Cola, Fanta and Sprite in the market. Immediately, I remembered these three wise sayings…

    What is false

    I learned from a spiritual work in the 1970s that- “whatever is false will inevitably collapse someday”.  Falsehood means anything that is not in accord with the Laws of Nature. This may be a form of government, an economic system, imbalance in relationships or even the type of food or drink we consume to maintain our health. We humans did not create ourselves. We did not create our world either. Thus, we are creatures and subject to the Will of the Creator in His Creation. In my view, our Creator provided us with a bountiful vineyard from which we are meant to obtain our meals fresh and filled with life-force. Because we urbanised and needed to store food for the future, a food industry arose which now developed not only poisonous chemicals to grow food and store them, but even more poisonous chemicals to preserve them for many days, weeks and even years. Our organs of elimination (detoxification) were not made to remove from our bodies the terrible chemicals we now eat and drink with food today. Over time, these organs (the lungs, kidneys, the liver and the skin) are unable to cope, become ill or damaged and, therefore, allow accumulations of poisons in our bodies which cause cancer and many of the degenerative diseases now ravaging the Nigerian population in large quantum. Someday, the public will become aware of this and, individually every person will remove himself or herself from the rot, as I did about 30 years ago.

    The separation from falsehood may come through a revolution, an opportunity for which the Lagos High Court Judgment provided. But the Nigerian public is a dormant, educated-illiterate population. Up till now, many people have not heard of the Lagos High Court Judgment. Some who have heard are asking if it is true. When they learn it is, they resign themselves to fate, saying … “Afterall, something will kill a man”. Those who do not  wish to die ask about the options the Lagos High Court or the Government has provided if they are to stop taking these drinks, as if the judge and the government brought them to this earth or bear primary responsibility for their life and existence on earth. I expect the government and the court not to press this matter too far, because of the possibility that it may unhinge society. Unemployment will grow today if Coca-Cola, Fanta and Sprite have to go. Think not only of those corporate offices and factories, but, also, of those hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of women who sell these “soft drinks” nationwide. If all of them have to go, their exit will be a tip of the iceberg.

    For the same chemicals we complain about in these “soft drinks” are present in commercially prepared white flour snacks which go by different names, tined foods, fruit juices, jams, pickles, salad dressings (these in particular contain large amounts of sodium benzoate), medicines and cosmetics, vinegars, salted margarine, still beverages, olives, pastry and pie fillings, stoned vegetables… almost everywhere in the food industry. So, an attack on Coco-Cola, Fanta and Sprite is an attack on the food industry. Your guess should, therefore, be as good as mine in respect of how the on-going rippling of the food industry will end if, because of the Nigerian complacency, the time is not ripe for “falsehood” to vacate the stage.

     

    A vexatious sea …

    Dr. Fijabi Adebo may not have realised he could cause trouble for  Nigeria’s food industry when, about eight years ago, his company, FIJABI ADEBO HOLDINGS LTD, approached Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) for business. In March 2007, The company purchased large quantities of Coca-Cola, Fanta Orange, Sprite, Fanta Lemon, Fanta Pineapple and Soda Lemon water for export to the United Kingdom. The products were to be retailed to the company’s customers in the U.K. But the Fanta and Sprite products failed to satisfy health safety requirements of the Stock Port Metropolitan Borough Council’s Trading Standard Department of Environment and Economy Directorate. The health authority found that Benzoic acid and sunset yellow levels in the products were too high for human consumption and could cause cancer. The products were seized and destroyed.

    The U.K funding’s were corroborated by the Coca-Cola Union. Adebo Holdings Company thought that, being a member of the Nigerians Export Promotion Council, it could lawfully export Nigerian products abroad. In any case, NBC was aware the products were to be exported and should have made them comply with the standards of the U.K. The company said NBC was negligent and “breached the duty of care” owed to its valued customers. As for NAFDAC, it said the agency failed to ensure that NBC offered safe products for sale. As a result, asked the judge to compel NAFDAC to force NBC to include a written warning on the labels of these products. The warning is to read that the products cannot be taken with Vitamin C.

    The Crux

    This is the heart or crux of the matter. Sodium benzoate and vitamin C (Ascorbic acid) are said to form Benzene, a proven carcinogen (cancer-causing agent). Food processors use sodium benzoate in acidic foods to control bacteria, yeast, fungi and mild, different species of the same microbial family. On its own, sodium benzoate is touted to cause no harm in the human body if it is not taken with vitamin c. The trouble, however, is that, today, many soft drink manufacturers try to make their products nutritive by adding Vitamin C to them, irrespective of the fact that these drinks are already preserved with Sodium benzoate. In the United States recently, the FDA tested 84 soft drink products and found that 54 of them contained Benzene. Others had levels of up to 79.2 ppb, whereas national rules disapprove of anything above 5 ppb in drinking water.

    Producers of the drinks get away because present limits are only on drinking water and not on soft drinks. Many critics of this double standard believe the producers of soft drinks have gotten away because they were able to over power the law-making machinery. At conferences, they sponsor researchers to hold down the system and re-assure the public that all is well. In the state of California, the government asked soft drinks manufacturers in 2001 to keep sodium Benzene below 0.15ppb. But the soft drinks industry has done nothing about that. Even the so-called powerful American media was irresponsive for a long while. The ground-breaking research on sodium Benzoate, Ascorbic acid and Benzene took place in 1993 and was published in that year in the JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE AND FOOD CHEMISTRY by researchers lalita K Gardner and Glen D Lawrence. But it wasn’t until 2005, by which time many people had died of cancer and other degenerative diseases that the American media began to talk about it.

    Nbl defence

    I pity the NBL. It is fighting an industry-wide battle. The pure water and bottle water sub-sector is keeping quit. So are those in white flour snack business. The sodium benzoate is in “pickles, peppers, salad dressings, jams, most condiments cheese, ketch up, or diet or regular soda… mouth wash, toothpaste, cough syrup, cream lotion and hundreds of cosmetics products”. They are all keeping mute. The NBL admits that it sold its products to Fijabi Adebo Holdings Ltd. But it said this customer did not inform it that the products were to be exported. The inference on which the NBL predicated its defense, therefore, was that, if it had this information it may have advised against the export of these products. This was because Coco-Cola Nigeria was a different franchise from Coca-Cola U.K. Both derived their existence from Coca-Cola International and produced the products under different specifications of national or municipal laws. The weather in Nigeria, being hotter than that of the U.K, would naturally require a different grade of antimicrobials. In any case, says NBL, sodium benzoate content of Nigerian products were still within the international range, although they were higher than U.K specifications. It, therefore, did not see itself as uncaring for the health and wellbeing of its customers as the court judgment tended to portray it. NAFDAC itself has served a notice of appeal against the judgment which painted it in like terms and compelled it to compel NBL to insert a warning on its label that it was dangerous to consume these products with Vitamin C.

    Rough weather

    There is no doubt that the weather is rough for the food industry. But it is doubtful if it would lose the battle in the end. Nutritionists know that consuming sodium benzoate and vitamin c together may cause cancer and other degenerative diseases. But so is consuming Sodium Benzoate with Vitamin E. Even if Vitamin C and Vitamin E are not  consume together with sodium benzoate, are there no free forms of Vitamin C and Vitamin E in the blood which can react with sodium benzoate taken independently to form Benzene? We shouldn’t forget that sodium benzoate is in hundreds of processed foods, cosmetics and probably beer.

    This suggests that little drops of sodium benzoate from diverse sources can form mighty oceans of sodium benzoate in the body which can then combine with vitamin c and vitamin E taken at separate times. Who can say that he or she does not take vitamin C and vitamin E food supplements with processed foods which, until now, he or she did not suspect to habour sodium benzoate? If NBL says it has not acted against any law by not including warning on the labels would it not be right to say so? Mr. Fijabi Adebo is not crusading for public health. He is fighting in court to recoup lost investment. It is the National Assembly and the Presidency, which can conduct public hearing and brings up a law. NAFDAC ought to have spearheaded this drive, following the trends abroad. Every day, doctors and lay people alike lament that more and more people are dying from all forms of cancer and other degenerative diseases, including eye problems.

    The sun has not begun to rise in the West and set in the East for us to link this trend to such a phenomenon. We must, therefore, look into the air we breathe, the food we eat and the water and drinks we consume. As we find sodium benzoate in most of them, we should be alarmed at the possible daily ingestion of it from varied sources and set new regulations. That is what they are doing in Europe and the U.S to always move on and leave us behind.

    Mr. Justice Adedayo Oyebanji of the Lagos High Court did a good job, in my view, to put the public on its toes. Although judges are meant to interpret the law, their interpretations sometimes amount to enactments. He has not told NBL to stop business. He has told it to warn the consumers of its products the risk they may be taking by consuming these products with vitamin C. I wonder what the judge would have decided if we knew that sodium benzoate could cause the same havocs when consumed with Vitamin E or when consumed independently. In www.naturalnews.com, we are advised:

    “Sodium benzoate has the ability to deprive the cells of oxygen, break down the immune system and cause cancer. It chokes out the body’s nutrient at the DNA cellular level by depriving mitochondria cells of oxygen, sometimes completely shutting them down. Just as humans need oxygen to breathe, cells need oxygen to function properly, and fight off infection, including cancer.”

    Everything must become new

    When I was striving in the 1970s to become a new man and came upon this admonition in a spiritual teaching, I almost gave up the search for the meaning of existence.

    But everything must become new, the author referred to the fact that our world did not come into being without a purpose for being, that it is a work which is governed by certain laws, that humans are in this part of that world for a purpose and governed by these laws, that they find peace and happiness when they conform with these laws, that conformity is at the levels of thoughts, the spoken or written word, and the physical deed, that divergence from conformity brings pain and ruin because it is outside the Will of the Almighty Creator. Therefore such works of man as marriage, education, human relationships, the government, jurisprudence, and nutrition, for example, will bring pain and ruin if they are conducted outside the natural laws. Everything must become new calls for a new human order in which the laws of Nature provide the frame work for human conduct.

    Everything must become new in nutrition as well. It is baseless argument to say preservatives are inevitable in the food industry of today’s world where urbanisation demands that food be transported across continents and stored for goodness knows how long. Have we asked ourselves how the Egyptians under the management of former slave boy Joseph preserved food in seven years of plenty for seven years of famine and more, during which the farms became productive again? Those were 14 long years or more. Man was close to Nature and natural beings in those days. Architect Lekan Adams, of Lagos, is richly endorsed with information and knowledge of the pyramid, as a storage powerhouse, much, much more efficient than the silos of today because its construction admits into it certain ethereal forces which can preserve anything for hundreds of years, if not more.

    Please keep the three concepts discussed above close to your heart in anything you observe or do … “Whatever is false will notably collapse someday”; “A wise person does not plunge into a rowdy sea for a swim”, and “everything must become new”.

  • Fanta, Sprite: Scientists back govt on food preservatives

    Fanta, Sprite: Scientists back govt on food preservatives

    Food scientists and technologists have thrown their weight behind the Federal Government’s endorsement of Fanta and Sprite, two products of the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC).

    In a statement in Lagos, the Nigerian Institute of Food Science and Technology (NIFST) said there was nothing to fear about the beverages, which a court held about two weeks, contained some chemicals harmful to health.

    The statement signed by NIFST  National President Dr. Dahiru Adamu and Vice President Oluwole Toye noted that the science of benzene formation from interaction between benzoic acid and ascorbic acid is based on the provision of specific conditions, such as presence of ultra violet light and high temperature of about 60 degrees Celsius.

    It said there were no reports that these two conditions were prevalent in the country.

    NIFST aligned with the Federal Ministry of Health which confirmed that benzoic acid is globally certified by the Codex Allimentarius Commission (CODEX) as a safe preservative used  in food and beverage products around the world.

    The statement reads: “NIFST also agrees that the Nigerian Industrial Standards for benzoic preservative for soft drinks is 250mg/kg and well within the international CODEX standard of 600mg/kg. That Nigeria and the United Kingdom (UK), just like every other country, are at liberty to set their national standards referencing the CODEX standard, taking into consideration their peculiar environmental and other realities.

    “That the results of tests carried out on the NBC products in question (Fanta and Sprite) by the UK Custom authorities in 2007 and the National Agency for Foods and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) in December 2016 showed that the products were in compliance with Nigeria’s regulatory standards for benzoic levels and are therefore safe for human consumption.”

    The institute, however, said, the controversy over the beverages provided an opportunity for debate and further exploration of the subject matter.

    It said it would raise a committee of experts to engage stakeholders on food safety in order to avert a recurrence of the controversy, which according to it, does not reflect the sound principles upon which established science is based.

     

     

  • Idahosa Varsity faults FG on clearance for Fanta, Sprite

    Idahosa Varsity faults FG on clearance for Fanta, Sprite

    Management of the Benson Idahosa University (BIU), in Edo State has said that a private research carried out on Fanta and Sprite showed that the Federal government was wrong on the green light given to Nigerians to consume the beverages.

    The University said information or data provided by the Federal government on the beverages fell short of addressing the safety concerns raised by the court.

    Speaking to reporters at the weekend, Vice Chancellor of the institution, Professor Ernest Izevbigie, said the institution owe the society the responsibilities to provide expert opinion on the matter.

    Prof Izevbigie, who is a professor of Biochemistry, said answers provided to questions such as the presence and amount of colourant in Fanta and the concentration of benzoic acid or sodium benzoate in the two beverages and the presence and concentration of benzene were not satisfactory.

    He stated that colourant used in Fanta, the yellow sunset, had been implicated in cytotoxicity, carcinogenesis, allergies and hyper activity in children when the right amount is not used.

    Prof. Izevbigie said the Federal Ministry of Health has some explanation to give on the standard given for the use of 250mg/kg benzoic acid in soft drinks as opposed to 150mg/kg that was obtainable in the United Kingdom and Ghana.

    Izevbigie said pasteurisation and the use of carbon dioxide could achieve the same goal as the use of high benzoic acid without the added health risks.

    He equally remarked that the Fanta produced in Nigeria already contained benzene due to the presence of benzoic acid and ascorbic acid (Vitamin C), pointing out that the product already contains Vitamin C and that the warning that it should not be taken with Vitamin C was confounding.

    According to him, “reduction of the sodium benzoate concentration to below 150mg/kg, a removal of Vitamin C as an ingredient in Fanta due to concern for benzene toxicity and the use of natural dye as a replacement for the colourant in Fanta.”

  • CPC commences investigation of Fanta and Sprite as NBC’s assure consumers

    The Consumer Protection Council (CPC) has instituted an investigation into the safety of addictives in Nigerian Bottling Company’s Fanta and Sprite with a view to safeguarding consumers.

    The Council’s action came on the heels of a recent court judgment which alleged that consumption of Fanta and Sprite, two products of Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC), could be harmful if taken with Vitamin C, the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) has instituted an investigation into the issue with a view to safeguarding consumers.

    Announcing the Council’s position to the media on Thursday, CPC’s Director General, Mrs. Dupe Atoki, pointed out that the investigation became inevitable in view of the safety issue raised by the judgment.

    Mrs. Atoki  stated that the Council “is keenly interested and extremely concerned about the questions that have arisen from, and on account of this judgement”, adding that “as such upon the discoveries therein, the CPC is launching a broad and detailed investigation as a matter of urgency”.

    The director general hinted that the key questions in the investigation would include “Is Sprite/Fanta at the time of production potentially harmful to consumers when consumed with Vitamin C? If yes, what is NBC’s obligation to consumers and has NBC fully discharged that obligation?”, adding that “pursuant to the Consumer Protection Council Act, the Council is interested in discovering what steps if any, NBC took after the testing and confiscation of Fanta and Sprite by the United Kingdom’s authorities”.

    While fielding questions from journalists at the press conference, Mrs. Atoki asserted that it would be hasty for CPC to make any categorical directive to consumers on the products without carrying out the necessary investigations.

    She disclosed that the Council had already engaged NBC in furtherance of the investigation, stating that the bottling company has been given seven days to respond to “us because we asked them for a lot of documentation.

    “We want to be free and fair. We do not want to base our decisions on what someone else has analysed. We have given them seven days within which to provide this information. And let me say that this will also involve us inviting experts to testify as to the various components and the effect on the consumers” Mrs. Atoki stated.

    On the time frame for the investigation, she said: “To say that it will take two to three weeks or even a month, I may not be able to say so, but because of the urgency, we will fast track all the processes and come to a very quick conclusion”.

    Meanwhile, NBC has allayed concerns over benzoic acid in soft drinks.

    According to the company in a statement, it said there has been some misleading information on the saftey of benzoic and ascorbic acids as ingredients in soft drinks.in some Media reports.

    “In the judgement delivered on February 15, 2017 in a suit involving Fijabi Adebo Holdings Limited & Dr. Emmanuel Fijabi Adebo v. Nigerian Bottling Company Limited (NBC) & National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), the Lagos High Court dismissed all claims against NBC and held that the company had not breached its duty of care to consumers and that there was no proven case of negligence against it”stated the Soft drink company.”

    NBC also noted in the same Statement that. “In the same judgement, the court directed NAFDAC to mandate NBC to include a warning on its bottles of Fanta and Sprite that its contents cannot be taken with Vitamin C as same become poisonous if taken with Vitamin C. This order was premised on the fact that the products contain the preservative, benzoic acid. NBC has since appealed this order.

    The Soft Drint Company further stated that the wrong perception emanating from the media reports that “our Fanta and Sprite beverages which are fully compliant with all national and international food quality and safety standards are unsafe, simply because their levels of Benzoic acid were not within the UK standards, is not only unfounded but also undermines the entire food and beverage industry in Nigeria which is regulated by the same ingredient levels approved by NAFDAC and other regulatory bodies for the country”.The company assured consumers and members of the public of their unwavering commitment to product quality, safety and customer satisfaction.

  • FG certifies Fanta, Sprite safe for consumption

    FG certifies Fanta, Sprite safe for consumption

    The Federal Ministry of Health yesterday put the controversy over the status of Fanta and Sprite to rest.

    The ministry declared both brands safe for consumption.

    There had been wide spread fears in the country following  the judgement of a Lagos High Court that  the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) should  order  the Nigeria Bottling Company (NBC) to issue a mandatory warning

    that the contents should not be taken with Vitamin C in order to avoid poisoning.

    The ministry waded into the meeting yesterday by calling a meeting  with officials of the  Department of Food and Drug Services, NAFDAC, and Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to address the matter.

    Spokesman for the ministry,Mr. Akinola Boade, said in a statement at the end of the meeting that

    the findings of the Ministry’s investigation revealed that both Benzoic acid and Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) are ingredients approved by International Food Safety regulators and used in many food and beverage products around the world.

    He said the Benzoic acid content in both drinks remains within the specification set by  Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC),the organ established by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO) to set internationally recognized standards, codes of practice, guidelines relating to foods, food production, and food safety.

    He said: “In the case of Benzoic acid, the standard set by Codex was 600mg/kg until recently reviewed to 250mg/kg and adopted in 2016 (CODEX STAN 192–1995 revised 2015 and 2016).

    “With reference to the Codex standard and other relevant documents, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) as the standard setting body in Nigeria in consultation with technical experts and relevant stakeholders elaborated the standard of benzoic acid in soft drinks to be at 250mg/kg based on the National climatic and storage conditions – this standard has been in existence since 1997 and revised in 2008 (NIS 217:2008).

    “The levels of benzoic acid in Fanta (1 batch) and Sprite (2 batches) presented by the claimant in the court are 188.64mg/kg, 201.06mg/kg and 161.5mg/kg respectively; these levels are in compliance with both the Codex and Nigeria Industrial Standards.”

    The ministry pointed out that “NAFDAC and SON regularly monitor the manufacturing practices of food industries and conduct laboratory analysis to ascertain continuous compliance with required national standards; there was a routine inspection conducted at Nigeria Bottling Company by NAFDAC officers in December 2016 which was satisfactory.”

    On the difference between the standard of Fanta and Sprite in Nigeria and the United Kingdom,it said  ” each country or region is permitted to adapt a standard/limit based on country-specific scientific evidence such as environmental, storage and distribution conditions; Benzoic acid as a preservative prevents the growth of microorganisms which thrive more at higher climatic temperatures like in Nigeria.

    “Due to the different environmental conditions obtainable in the UK, the standard for benzoic acid was set at a lower limit of 150mg/kg while in Nigeria it was set at 250mg/kg even below that of Codex (as at time of production of that batch; Codex limit was 600mgkg); and Food products being imported into a country must comply with the relevant standards of the destination country.”

    It said the plaintiff in the suit that sparked the controversy  ”did not obtain NAFDAC certification before export, otherwise, he would have been advised on the required standard of the destination country.”

  • Health ministry certifies Fanta, Sprite safe for consumers

    Health ministry certifies Fanta, Sprite safe for consumers

    The Federal Ministry of Health Friday put the controversy over the status of Fanta and Sprite to rest.

    The ministry declared both brands safe for consumption.

    There had been wide spread fears in the country following  the judgement of a Lagos High Court that  the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) should  order  the Nigeria Bottling Company (NBC) to issue a mandatory warning that the contents should not be taken with Vitamin C in order to avoid poisoning.

    The ministry waded into the meeting yesterday by calling a meeting with officials of the Department of Food and Drug Services, NAFDAC, and Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to address the matter.

    Spokesman for the ministry,Mr. Akinola Boade, said in a statement at the end of the meeting that the findings of the Ministry’s investigation revealed that both Benzoic acid and Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) are ingredients approved by International Food Safety regulators and used in many food and beverage products around the world.

    He said the Benzoic acid content in both drinks remains within the specification set by Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC),the organ established by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO) to set internationally recognized standards, codes of practice, guidelines relating to foods, food production, and food safety.

    He said: “In the case of Benzoic acid, the standard set by Codex was 600mg/kg until recently reviewed to 250mg/kg and adopted in 2016 (CODEX STAN 192–1995 revised 2015 and 2016).

    “With reference to the Codex standard and other relevant documents, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) as the standard setting body in Nigeria in consultation with technical experts and relevant stakeholders elaborated the standard of benzoic acid in soft drinks to be at 250mg/kg based on the National climatic and storage conditions – this standard has been in existence since 1997 and revised in 2008 (NIS 217:2008).

    “The levels of benzoic acid in Fanta (1 batch) and Sprite (2 batches) presented by the claimant in the court are 188.64mg/kg, 201.06mg/kg and 161.5mg/kg respectively; these levels are in compliance with both the Codex and Nigeria Industrial Standards.”

    The ministry pointed out that “NAFDAC and SON regularly monitor the manufacturing practices of food industries and conduct laboratory analysis to ascertain continuous compliance with required national standards; there was a routine inspection conducted at Nigeria Bottling Company by NAFDAC officers in December 2016 which was satisfactory.”

    On the difference between the standard of Fanta and Sprite in Nigeria and the United Kingdom, it said “each country or region is permitted to adapt a standard/limit based on country-specific scientific evidence such as environmental, storage and distribution conditions; Benzoic acid as a preservative prevents the growth of microorganisms which thrive more at higher climatic temperatures like in Nigeria.

    “Due to the different environmental conditions obtainable in the UK, the standard for benzoic acid was set at a lower limit of 150mg/kg while in Nigeria it was set at 250mg/kg even below that of Codex (as at time of production of that batch; Codex limit was 600mgkg); and Food products being imported into a country must comply with the relevant standards of the destination country.”

    It said the plaintiff in the suit that sparked the controversy “did not obtain NAFDAC certification before export, otherwise, he would have been advised on the required standard of the destination country.”

     

  • Fanta, Sprite with Vitamin C not poisonous, says NBC

    Fanta, Sprite with Vitamin C not poisonous, says NBC

    The Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) Limited has faulted claims that its products, Fanta and Sprite when taken with Vitamins C are poisonous.

    In a statement by its management Wednesday, the firm said information on the safety of benzoic and ascorbic acids as ingredients in soft drinks, citing a Lagos High Court order, is misleading.

    “In the judgement delivered on February 15, 2017 in a suit involving Fijabi Adebo Holdings Limited & Dr. Emmanuel Fijabi Adebo vs. Nigerian Bottling Company Limited (NBC) & National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), the Lagos High Court dismissed all claims against NBC and held that the company had not breached its duty of care to consumers and that there was no proven case of negligence against it.

    “In the same judgement, the court directed NAFDAC to mandate NBC to include a warning on its bottles of Fanta and Sprite that its contents cannot be taken with Vitamin C as same become poisonous if taken with Vitamin C. This order was premised on the fact that the products contain the preservative, benzoic acid. NBC has since appealed this order.”

    The firm explained that the standards for testing benzoic acid in soft drinks differs from country to country and is influenced by different factors such as climate.

    The United Kingdom (UK), it added, being a temperate country, requires lower preservative levels unlike a tropical country like Nigeria, but that this did not make NBC’s products harmful when taken with Vitamin C.

    “In the subject case which dates back to 2007, the UK authorities confiscated a consignment of our products shipped to that country by the plaintiff because their benzoic acid levels were not within the UK national level, although well within the levels approved by both the national regulators for Nigeria and the international levels set by CODEX, the joint inter-governmental body responsible for harmonising food standards globally.

    “The UK standards limit benzoic acid in soft drinks to a maximum of 150 mg/kg. Both Fanta and Sprite have benzoic levels of 200 mg/kg which is lower than the Nigerian regulatory limit of 250 mg/kg when combined with ascorbic acid and 300 mg/kg without ascorbic acid and also lower than the 600 mg/kg international limit set by CODEX.”

    It noted that both benzoic acid and ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) are ingredients approved by international food safety regulators and used in many food and beverage products around the world.

    “These two ingredients are also used in combination in some of these products within levels which may differ from one country to another as approved by the respective national food and drug regulators and in line with the range prescribed by CODEX.

    “The permissible ingredient levels set by countries for their food and beverage products are influenced by a number of factors such as climate, an example being the UK, a temperate region, requiring lower preservative levels unlike tropical countries.”

    The firm added that “given the fact that the benzoic and ascorbic acid levels in Fanta as well as the benzoic acid level in Sprite produced and sold by NBC in Nigeria are in compliance with the levels approved by all relevant national regulators and the international level set by CODEX, “there is no truth in the report that these products would become poisonous if consumed alongside Vitamin C.

    “The wrong perception emanating from the media reports that our Fanta and Sprite beverages which are fully compliant with all national and international food quality and safety standards are unsafe, simply because their levels of Benzoic acid were not within the UK standards, is not only unfounded but also undermines the entire food and beverage industry in Nigeria which is regulated by the same ingredient levels approved by NAFDAC and other regulatory bodies for the country.”

    It assured its consumers and members of the public of its “unwavering commitment to product quality, safety and customer satisfaction.”