Cereal killer: Food giant questions obesity strategy | Inquirer News
Legal challenge in UK

Cereal killer: Food giant questions obesity strategy

/ 05:48 AM April 29, 2022

BATTLE CREEK, MI - OCTOBER 07: The Kellogg's Cereal Plant on 425 Porter Street on October 7, 2021 in Battle Creek, Michigan. Workers at Kellogg’s cereal plants are striking over the loss of premium health care, holiday and vacation pay, and reduced retirement benefits.   Rey Del Rio/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Rey Del Rio / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

The Kellogg’s Cereal Plant on 425 Porter Street on October 7, 2021 in Battle Creek, Michigan. (Photo by Rey Del Rio / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

LONDON — Cereals giant Kellogg’s said Wednesday it had launched a legal challenge against new rules that will limit the prominence of sugary foods in English shops as part of a new campaign against obesity.

The government’s strategy only calculated the fat, salt and sugar content of cereals when eaten dry, not when taken with milk, the US company said in a statement announcing the judicial review.

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“We’ve tried to have a reasonable conversation with the UK government over the past 12 months about making this change, but to no avail,” Kellogg’s UK managing director Chris Silcock said.

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“All of this matters because, unless you take account of the nutritional elements added when cereal is eaten with milk, the full nutritional value of the meal is not measured,” he said.

The new regulations, which take effect in England in October, will also ban television advertising of unhealthy foods before 9 p.m., to try to limit children’s exposure.

The state-funded National Health Service (NHS) estimates that some 10 percent of 4- and 5-year-olds are obese, and it is double that figure for those age 10 and 11.

It adds that one in four adults are obese, with cheap, high-calorie foods blamed in part.

The government said it would resist the challenge by Kellogg’s, noting that obesity costs the NHS more than 6 billion po unds($7.5 billion) a year and is the second biggest cause of cancer in the United Kingdom.

“Breakfast cereals contribute 7 percent—a significant amount—to the average daily free sugar intakes of children,” a health ministry spokesperson said.

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“Restricting the promotion and advertising of less healthy foods is an important part of the cross-government strategy to halve childhood obesity by 2030, prevent harmful diseases and improve healthy life expectancy, so we can continue to level up health across the nation.’’

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TAGS: cereals, Kellogg’s, obesity

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