The Consumer Protection Council (CPC) said Mirinda and
Lucozade soft drinks are unsafe for Nigerian consumers.
The council said both beverages contained benzoic acid
level above the limit approved by the Nigerian Industrial Standard (NIS).
The Council said in a statement obtained yesterday in Abuja that while the NIS limit for benzoic acid is 250mg/Kg, when
combined with Vitamin C and 300mg/Kg without Vitamin C, test revealed that
Mirinda, a product of 7UP Bottling Company, contained benzoic acid ranging
between 0.56mg/L to 330.9mg/L.
It said Lucozade, formerly produced by Glaxo SmithKline,
contained the acid between 2.26mg/L to 323.53mg/L.
The two companies were however not available for comments
yesterday.
The council said the test was conducted at the Sheda
Science and Technology Complex (SHESTCO), a laboratory under the Federal
Ministry of Science and Technology.
The council said it obtained 65 samples of soft drinks
from the open market in eight locations within the six geopolitical zones of
Nigeria, made up of Fanta Orange, Sprite, Mirinda and Lucozade.
“The Council also observed from the results that there
were isolated cases of Mirinda and Lucozade with Benzoic Acid levels of
330.9mg/L and 323.53mg/L respectively, which are above the NIS limit,” the
Director General of CPC, Mrs Dupe Atoki, said.
The Council further said the test found that benzoic acid
levels in Fanta Orange ranged from 5.09mg/L to 197.0mg/L while that of Sprite
ranged from 2.82mg/L to 239.0mg/L, indicating that both soft drinks were safe
for Nigerian consumers as they contained benzoic acid within the limit approved
by the NIS.
Atoki said NAFDAC and SON have been informed of the
investigation and has recommended regulatory action and review of the “benzoic
acid limits in soft drinks as the current standard, which has been in existence
since 2008 is overdue for review.”
Effects of excess benzoic acid on the human system
Head Dietetics Department at the National Hospital,
Abuja, Mrs Sarah Abagi said excess benzoic acid has negative effects on the
skin, the nervous system and the skeletal system and bones.
She said benzoic acid should not be more than the
approved limit or in large quantities in food and drinks especially carbonated
drinks because of these effects and the diseases it cause, adding that it was
used as an emulsifier and in body creams.
Asked the approved limit, she said deciding the approved
limit for each country or area is usually done by experts like, food scientists
and food technologists, biochemists and process engineers under the purview of
regulatory organizations like National Agency for Food and Drug Administration
and Control (NAFDAC).
Health experts also say that benzoic acids may react with
ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) in some soft drinks, forming small quantities of
benzene, which causes cancer and other ailments. Some studies have also linked
benzene with bone marrow failure, acute leukemia and aplastic anemia.
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