Showing posts with label Nutella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nutella. Show all posts
Monday, February 25, 2019
World's largest Nutella factory reopens after 'quality defect'
The world's largest Nutella factory restarted production on Monday after it stopped work for five days as a precautionary measure over a "quality defect", owner Ferrero's French branch said.
The factory in Normandy, France stopped making the chocolate-and-hazelnut spread due to a "suspected quality defect strictly limited to the production stage," Ferrero France's communications service told AFP.
It added that the problem was "very early in the process, at the stage of grinding and roasting hazelnuts."
"The factory started up again this morning at 6:00 am (0500 GMT). We are at 100 percent production capacity."
The Villers-Ecalles site in Normandy produces around 600,000 jars a day, or about a quarter of all the Nutella made worldwide.
Nutella's Italian owner Ferrero, whose products also include Ferrero Rocher chocolates, first announced production had been suspended on Wednesday.
"All concerns have been fully lifted," Ferrero France said on Friday.
"We can say that no products currently on the market are impacted by the situation and that the supply to our customers continues without interruption."
The Ferrero group, with 30,000 employees and 22 production sites around the globe, also makes Kinder surprise eggs and chocolate bars as well as Tic Tac mints.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Nutella maker fights back on palm oil after cancer risk study
ALBA, Italy - The $44 billion palm oil industry, under pressure in Europe after authorities listed the edible oil as a cancer risk, has found a vocal ally in the food sector: the maker of Nutella.
Italian confectionery firm Ferrero has taken a public stand in defense of an ingredient that some other food companies in the country are boycotting. It has launched an advertising campaign to assure the public about the safety of Nutella, its flagship product which makes up about a fifth of its sales.
The hazelnut and chocolate spread, one of Italy's best-known food brands and a popular breakfast treat for children, relies on palm oil for its smooth texture and shelf life. Other substitutes, such as sunflower oil, would change its character, according to Ferrero.
"Making Nutella without palm oil would produce an inferior substitute for the real product, it would be a step backward," Ferrero's purchasing manager Vincenzo Tapella told Reuters. He features in a TV commercial aired in Italy over the past three months that has drawn criticism from some politicians.
Any move away from palm oil would also have economic implications as it is the cheapest vegetable oil, costing around $800 a ton, compared with $845 for sunflower oil and $920 for rapeseed oil, another possible substitute.
Ferrero uses about 185,000 tonnes of palm oil a year, so replacing it with those substitutes could cost the firm an extra $8-22 million annually, at those prices. The company declined to comment on these calculations.
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) said in May that palm oil generated more of a potentially carcinogenic contaminant than other vegetable oils when refined at temperatures above 200 degrees Celsius. It did not, however, recommend consumers stop eating it and said further study was needed to assess the level of risk.
The detailed research into the contaminant - known as GE - was commissioned by the European Commission in 2014 after an EFSA study the year before, into substances generated during industrial refining, identified it as being potentially harmful.
EFSA does not have the power to make regulations, though the issue is under review by the European Commission. The spokesman for Health and Food Safety, Enrico Brivio, said guidance would be issued by the end of this year. Measures could include regulations to limit the level of GE in food products, but there will not be a ban on the use of palm oil, he added.
The World Health Organization and the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization flagged the same potential risk that EFSA had warned of regarding GE, but did not recommend consumers stop eating palm oil. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration also has not banned the use of palm oil in food.
The issue became a hot consumer topic in Italy after the largest supermarket chain, Coop, boycotted palm oil in all its own-brand products following the EFSA study, describing the move as a "precaution". Italy's biggest baker, Barilla, also eliminated it and put "palm oil-free" labels on its wares.
The retailers' decisions followed pressure from activists, including Italy's main farming association Coldiretti and online food magazine Il Fatto Alimentare, which called on all food firms to stop using palm oil.
High temperatures are used to remove palm oil's natural red color and neutralize its smell, but Ferrero says it uses an industrial process that combines a temperature of just below 200C and extremely low pressure to minimize contaminants.
The process takes longer and costs 20 percent more than high-temperature refining, Ferrero told Reuters. But it said this had allowed it to bring GE levels so low that scientific instruments find it hard to trace the chemical.
"The palm oil used by Ferrero is safe because it comes from freshly squeezed fruits and is processed at controlled temperatures," Tapella says in the TV ad, which was filmed at the firm's factory in the northern town of Alba and was accompanied by full-page ads in newspapers carrying the same message.
EFSA declined to comment on the possible risks of refining palm oil at lower temperatures.
ITALIAN SALES HIT
Ferrero is by no means the only big European food firm to keep using palm oil in its products since the EFSA report. The likes of Unilever and Nestle use it in products including chocolate, snacks and margarine.
The two companies said they were monitoring the contaminant issue and were working with their suppliers to keep GE at lowest possible levels.
Ferrero is the only big European food company to mount such a public defense of the use of the ingredient in its products following the EFSA opinion.
The company told Reuters it carried out "hundreds of thousands of tests" on contaminants in both the palm oil it uses and finished products.
Retail sales of Nutella in Italy fell by about 3 percent in the 12 months to the end of August, which Ferrero partly blamed on rivals promoting products as palm oil-free.
To address consumer concern the company launched its advertising campaign in September and says it is now showing results.
Nutella sales in Italy rose 4 percent in the last four months of 2016, said Alessandro D'Este, the head of Ferrero's Italy business.
Global Nutella sales have been unaffected by the EFSA opinion and are growing at 5-6 percent annually, the company said. Family owned Ferrero, which is not publicly listed, did not disclose its sales for Europe outside its home market.
The group ended its fiscal year to August with total revenue of 10 billion euros ($10.5 billion), of which around 2 billion euros came from Nutella sales.
ENVIRONMENT CONCERNS
EFSA's 284-page study comes on top of environmental concerns that have dogged the palm oil industry for several years. Green groups have accused the industry of causing deforestation.
Several firms using the ingredient, including Ferrero, say they buy palm oil certified by the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, which works with producers to reduce the negative impacts of cultivation on the environment.
Tapella told Reuters that Nutella had contained palm oil since its creation in the 1960s and that the group relied only on palm plantations certified as sustainable.
Ferrero's advertising campaign has drawn some political fire.
The anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, which is running neck-and-neck with the ruling Democratic Party in opinion polls, has asked the Italian advertising authority to block Ferrero's campaign and fine it for misleading consumers on both health and environmental risks.
A spokeswoman for the advertising authority said it had yet to decide whether to reject the 5-Star complaint or take measures against Ferrero, adding that the process could take several more weeks.
The palm oil industry, dominated by producers in Malaysia and Indonesia, believes Ferrero is playing an important role in addressing what it regards as misconceptions among consumers.
"It is good that Ferrero has clarified that the palm oil they use is safe and sustainable," said Yusof Basiron, chief executive of the Malaysian Palm Oil Council.
He said Malaysian producers had not suffered any impact on their European exports after the EFSA opinion. The Indonesian Palm Oil Association also said there had been no impact.
(Additional reporting by Emily Chow in Kuala Lumpur, Paul Sandle in London and Silke Koltrowitz in Zurich; Editing by Mark Bendeich and Pravin Char)
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Nutella dispute lands California man behind bars
CALIFORNIA - A California man was sentenced on Tuesday to two years in jail for punching an elderly man at a store in a dispute over Nutella samples.
Derrick Gharabighi, who had been detained since the altercation last September at a Costco warehouse store in Burbank, received the sentence but was immediately released having earned credit for time served.
The 25-year-old was arrested and charged with elder abuse after punching in the face a 78-old-man who had challenged him for taking too many samples of the chocolate-hazelnut spread.
"He takes two, three of them, left one," Sahak Sahakian told local media at the time. "I want to take that one, and he catch my hand. I say, 'What are you doing? Let me eat this one.'"
Police said Sahakian suffered "significant laceration above his left eye and swelling around the same area of his face."
Free samples are a huge attraction at Costco stores throughout the United States. Hungry shoppers can often be seen crowding around a sample table to grab free food and drinks.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Monday, February 16, 2015
Billionaire behind Nutella, Ferrero Rocher empire dies
Ferrero is Italy's biggest privately owned firm
MILAN - Michele Ferrero, Italy's richest man and the owner of a global chocolate and confectionery empire, died on Saturday aged 89, the company said.
His death opens the question of succession and potential tie-ups at the family-controlled Ferrero group, which has sales of around 8 billion euros ($9 billion) and continued to grow through Italy's longest recession since World War Two.
Ferrero dreamt up the chocolate-hazelnut Nutella spread, Ferrero Rocher pralines, Kinder eggs and Tic Tac sweets, turning a provincial chocolate factory into what is widely seen as Italy's most valuable privately-owned company.
The billionaire died at home in Monaco after months of illness, the group said in a statement.
Italian President Sergio Mattarella said he was deeply touched by Ferrero's death, calling him a "born entrepreneur".
Twitter was flooded with messages from people who thanked Ferrero for "sweetening up" their lives.
Ferrero's son Giovanni became chief executive of the chocolate empire after his older brother Pietro, the chosen heir, died of a heart attack in 2011 while cycling in South Africa.
In late 2013, Giovanni denied suggestions that the company had been approached by the Swiss-based multinational Nestle, saying Ferrero was not for sale. But industry insiders say he is less interested than his brother was in running the company.
Ferrero senior was a man of few words who shunned publicity, turning a local business from the Piedmont region into a global giant. He had a reputation as a forceful leader, but also as one who maintained generous working conditions and gave back to his community.
Until a few years ago, Ferrero commuted by helicopter every day from his Monte Carlo villa to company headquarters in Alba, northwest Italy, to taste and help design new products.
He never let outsiders buy into the company, which his father set up in 1946. The group, which toyed with the idea of making a bid for its British rival Cadbury a few years ago, is present in 53 countries.
Forbes magazine described Ferrero as "the richest candyman on the planet", putting him and his family in 30th place on their list of the world's wealthiest people, with a net worth of $23.4 billion.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Monday, August 25, 2014
Why Nutella, Ferrero Rocher may raise prices
ISTANBUL - Fans of chocolate spread Nutella or the hazelnut-filled Ferrero Rocher could soon be facing rising bills for their nutty treats because of poor weather in Turkey.
Prices of hazelnuts have surged in recent weeks after cold late winter weather and bitter frosts caused a poor harvest in the nut's chief exporter Turkey.
The rise has been so sharp it risks driving up the prices of popular consumer products like chocolate spreads or nut-filled chocolate bars.
Half of Turkey's exports go to Germany and Italy, the headquarters of the Italian giant Ferrero, which owns brands like Nutella and Kinder and is the world's largest buyer of hazelnuts.
Ferrero said in a widely-reported statement that it was "tracking this issue closely and there's no foreseeable impact on the availability of Nutella".
It may seem strange that the price of Nutella could be the victim of a cold snap on Turkey's Black Sea coast, which is the hub of the country's hazelnut industry.
But this is the bitter reality after four hazelnut-producing Turkish provinces on the Black Sea -- Giresun, Trabzon, Rize and Ordu -- in March were hit by storms and unusual freezing weather, which destroyed part of the harvest.
Production of hazelnuts in Turkey usually amounts to 590,000 tonnes a year -- three-quarters of global consumption.
But this year production is set to fall to 370,00 tonnes, according to Turkish producers.
The fall in supply has already led to a spike in wholesale prices, which have climbed some 80 percent.
"Last year, the price of a kilo of hazelnuts was around six Turkish lira ($2.75). Now it has reached 11 lira ($5.0)," said Nejat Yurnur, head of a hazelnut factory in Ordu.
- Buyers feel crunch -
Ilyas Edip Sevinc, head of the exporters confederation for the Black Sea region, said hazelnut groves lying at an altitude of 300 metres (1,000 feet) had lost up to 80 percent of their crop due to the bad weather.
"We are expecting a fall in our sales, even if we don't yet have exact figures," he said.
Sevinc warned that the problems would have a knock-on effect on the global chocolate industry.
"All the hazelnuts sold in Turkey for abroad are used solely by the chocolate industry," he said.
The head of the chamber of agriculture in Ordu, Ugur Corut, said that Turkish markets would remain well-supplied, but international buyers would suffer a major hit.
The price of Nutella and other sweet hazelnut products rose when similar freezing weather hit hazelnut production in 2003 and 2004 in Turkey's Black Sea region, according to Turkish media.
"Turkey exports hazelnuts to 120 different countries because these Turkish nuts are delicious," Corut was quoted as saying by the Dogan news agency.
"This season there is a shortage of hazelnuts in Ordu and Giresun. This situation will hit the world market. The nuts that we have from this season (2013-2014) will satisfy the Turkish domestic market," he added.
One of Turkey's biggest confectionery producers said it would continue to buy hazelnuts, but it would have to be in smaller quantities than before.
"We will continue to buy hazelnuts but by reducing the quantity bought," said Mahir Bas of ETI.
"The price of the chocolates could of course increase as the cost of goods sold has already gone up," he said.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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