Home Health Arla Foods responds to claims its methane-reducing cow feed additive ‘Bovaer’ could ‘contaminate’ milk and cause cancer

Arla Foods responds to claims its methane-reducing cow feed additive ‘Bovaer’ could ‘contaminate’ milk and cause cancer

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TikTok users have claimed that the additive

Arla Foods has responded to claims that its new methane-reducing cow feed additive could “contaminate” milk and cause cancer.

Shoppers threatened to boycott dairy products made by the Danish company and sold in Tesco, Morrisons and Lidl, including milk and butter, after the company announced a trial that would involve giving its cows a feed additive called Bovaer.

The chemical, which would be introduced into livestock feed, is designed to reduce the amount of methane they produce in digestion, a gas that contributes to climate change.

European and UK regulators have declared it a safe additive as it does not transfer into milk.

An Arla spokesperson said: “The health and safety of both consumers and animals is always our number one priority.”

“Bovaer has already been used widely and safely across Europe and at no point during the trial will there be any impact on the milk we produce as it does not pass from cow to milk.

“Regulatory bodies, such as the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the UK Food Standards Agency, have approved its use based on evidence that it does not harm animals or adversely affect their health, productivity or quality.” of milk”.

However, social media is awash with claims that the additive can cause fertility problems and cancer.

Dozens of Brits have taken to TikTok to share clips of themselves flushing dairy products down the toilet and throwing them into the bin.

TikTokers have claimed the additive “could be” carcinogenic, but experts say that’s not the case

TikTokers have shared videos demonstrating their boycott by throwing food products into the trash.

TikTokers have shared videos demonstrating their boycott by throwing food products into the trash.

Great Yarmouth Reform MP and billionaire businessman Rupert Lowe also jumped on the bandwagon this afternoon, tweeting that he “won’t consume anything containing Bovaer”.

So what is the truth?

Speaking to MailOnline, experts have assured customers that there is probably nothing to worry about.

“Additives used in agriculture must undergo rigorous testing by food safety authorities in both the UK and Europe for their use to be permitted,” said Professor Gunter Kuhnle, a nutrition expert at the University of Reading. .

“If a major brand uses something, you can generally trust that it is perfectly safe for consumption.”

Registered nutritionist Rob Hobson said that if Bovaer has been approved by regulators in the UK and Europe, it was “safe to assume” that milk from cattle fed the product would be fine to consume.

“They’re not going to allow something to be used if it doesn’t meet safety standards,” he said.

Bovaer is a compound made of silicon dioxide, propylene glycol and organic compound 3-nitrooxypropanol which is known as 3-nitrooxypropanol or abbreviated as 3-NOP.

Concerns spreading online about the additive mainly refer to regulators’ documents on handling the substance on an industrial scale.

A man filmed himself with Arla products and told his followers that

A man filmed himself with Arla products and told his followers they would “go straight down the drain.”

In a TikTok video, a user with more than 4,000 followers pours her bottle down the sink and adds

In a TikTok video, a user with more than 4,000 followers pours her bottle down the sink and adds “bye-bye Arla.”

One from the US Federal Drug Administration (FDA) says the product is not for human use.

It adds: ‘Caution should be used when handling this product. 3-Nitrooxypropanol can damage male fertility and reproductive organs, is potentially harmful when inhaled, and irritates the skin and eyes.

It is recommended that those who handle it use protective equipment that covers the eyes, mouth and gloves.

Claims that it causes cancer center on safety studies carried out in rats that were evaluated by the UK regulator, the Food Standards Agency.

This details the results of studies that gave rodents a high dose of the product suggesting that it increased the risk of cancer in females.

However, a follow-up analysis found that disease rates were not statistically higher than the control group.

In conclusion, the FSA ruled: “Due to the absence of malignancy and genotoxicity, it was concluded that the additive is not carcinogenic at the recommended inclusion dose.”

Claims that the product is linked to Bill Gates appear to be a confusion, as the Microsoft co-founder invested millions in Rumin 8, an independent company developing similar methane-reducing supplements in early 2023.

Great Yarmouth Reform MP Rupert Lowe intervened in the debate this afternoon and pledged to boycott the products.

Great Yarmouth Reform MP Rupert Lowe intervened in the debate this afternoon and pledged to boycott the products.

Conspiracy theorists have wrongly linked the two companies without evidence.

This appears to have led to widespread distrust in the ingredient, with social media users cherry-picking information that appears to link Bovaer to health issues.

Arla has responded to what she called “completely false” “misinformation” surrounding the additive on social media, particularly the confusion between Bovaer and the company Rumin 8 that had benefited from Gates’ investment.

Responding to the social media storm, an Arla spokesperson said: “information spread online about our connection with Bill Gates is completely false and claims relating to his involvement in our products are inaccurate.”

Bovaer’s manufacturer, Dsm-firmenich, also warned that the trials had led to “false and misinformation” about the feed.

In a statement they assured the public that “as long as it is used according to recommendations,” Bovaer “never passes into milk and therefore does not reach consumers.”

The supplement is also “specifically designed to break down in the cow’s digestive system and quickly breaks down into natural compounds already present in the cow’s rumen,” the Dutch-Swiss multinational added.

Bovaer’s product safety sheet recommends the use of masks and gloves when handling the additive to avoid risks “from small dust particles.”

Arla Foods responds to claims its methane reducing cow feed additive

In a TikTok video viewed thousands of times, a user pours his Arla milk down the sink and adds:

In a TikTok video viewed thousands of times, a user pours his Arla milk down the sink and adds: “Arla is not in my house.”

Another TikTok video posted yesterday captured a woman emptying her Arla bottle into the toilet before flushing it.

Another TikTok video posted yesterday captured a woman emptying her Arla bottle into the toilet before flushing it.

But this is a “standard sheet” designed for workers at processing facilities, Dsm-firmenich also noted.

This simply “ensures safe use” and “such procedures are quite common for feed.”

In a TikTok video viewed more than 207,000 times, a man points to his bottle of Asda semi-skimmed milk which displays the label “from Arla farms”.

He adds: “This will go down the drain and I will never buy Asda milk again.”

Another sees a woman empty her bottle of Arla into the toilet before flushing it.

“This is the closest we get,” he says. “From now on we will have local milk.”

In another TikTok video, a user with more than 4,000 followers pours her bottle down the sink and adds “bye-bye Arla.”

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