Friday, 9 March 2012

Coke and Pepsi alter recipe to avoid cancer warning label


Coca-Cola and Pepsi are altering the formula for their drinks to keep away from putting a cancer caution label on the bottle, to meet the terms of California laws. The new recipe for caramel coloring in the drinks has less 4-methylimidazole - a chemical which California has included to its list of carcinogens.
The modification to the formula has already been brought in California. But the companies say rolling out the new formula across the US makes the drinks well-organized to manufacture.

Diana Garza, Coca-Cola representative told the news agencies that there is no public health issue that gives good reason for such change. The Company took this step by asking its caramel suppliers so that the products that are currently in the market would not be put to the requirement of a recall or a scientifically unfounded warning.

According to a research the chemical has been connected to cancer in mice and rats, but there is no report or proof that it causes any health issue in Humans. The rumor about the cancerous chemical is faded away after a confirmation by US Food and Drug authorities. According to them a person would have to drink more than 1000 drinks of Coke or Pepsi to take in the same quantity of that chemical.

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