May 27, 2024
Hershey’s aims to reduce lead, cadmium in dark chocolate | CBC News

Hershey’s aims to reduce lead, cadmium in dark chocolate | CBC News

Hershey Co. is looking to reduce “trace” amounts of lead and cadmium in its chocolate, chief financial officer Steve Voskuil told Reuters on Wednesday, after Consumer Reports found that some dark chocolate bars had potentially harmful levels of the heavy metals.

Consumer Reports, a non-profit consumer group, tested chocolate bars including those made by Hershey late last year and found that some of them contained possibly harmful levels of lead, cadmium or both for people who eat more than one ounce per day.

The trace amounts of the metals found in some chocolate are “below any recommended level, any standard,” Voskuil said, adding that lead and cadmium are elements in soil and can naturally occur in the product.

“Depending on where you source, you may get relatively more lead or cadmium in West Africa versus South America, but in both cases it’s a naturally occurring ingredient,” he said.

“We would love to eradicate it completely and continue to look for opportunities in the process, is there more we can do there,” he said on the sidelines of the Pennsylvania-based company’s investor day.

A company spokesperson said it’s “difficult to completely eliminate” the elements from agricultural material.

Consumer Reports found that Hershey’s Lily’s extremely dark chocolate 85 per cent cocoa bar was high in lead and cadmium. Its Hershey’s Special Dark mildly sweet chocolate and Lily’s extra dark chocolate 70 per cent were also high in lead, according to the report.

Voskuil said the manufacturing and cleaning process for cocoa beans removes the “vast majority” of lead and cadmium.

Hershey is “evaluating” if it can remove more of the metals through additional cleaning of cocoa beans or alternate sourcing, he said.

“Despite the cleaning process we’re also always looking, are there other things we can do to reduce it even lower,” Voskuil said.

Hershey faces multiple lawsuits from consumers who claim the chocolate maker should have disclosed the levels of heavy metals, and that they would have paid less for or not bought the products had they known.

WATCH | Lead, cadmium found in some chocolate products:

Several dark chocolate brands contain traces of lead, cadmium: study

A recent study found that 28 brands of dark chocolate contained high concentrations of cadmium and lead — heavy metals that can cause brain and nervous system damage and cancer if consumed in high levels. 

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