The Food and Drug Administration rejected a petition from the Corn Refiners Assn. to rename high-fructose corn syrup âcorn sugar,â saying that the change could confuse consumers and âpose a public health concern.â
In a letter to association President Audrae Erickson made public Wednesday evening, the federal agency told the industry group that using âcorn sugarâ on nutrition labels could even prove dangerous for customers who suffer from fructose intolerance.
The FDA also considers sugar to be a âsolid, dried and crystallized foodâ while syrup is âan aqueous solution or liquid food,â wrote Michael M. Landa, the agencyâs director for the Center for Food Safe ty and Applied Nutrition.
In a statement, Erickson said that the corn refinersâ petition was denied âon narrow, technical groundsâ and complained that the FDA âdid not address or question the overwhelming scientific evidence that high-fructose corn syrup is a form of sugar and is nutritionally the same as other sugars.â
âThe vast majority of American consumers are confusedâ about the product, Erickson said.
The nearly 2-year-old petition argued that consumers inaccurately assume that high-fructose corn syrup has more calories, fructose and sweetness than sugar.
The industry group even launched a multimillion-dollar advertising and marketing campaign as the FDA considered its request. Sugar companies and trade associations struck b ack with a federal lawsuit, now pending in Los Angeles, alleging that the CRA made misleading claims.Â
Advocacy groups such as Consumers Union celebrated the FDAâs decision.
âIf the name had been changed, it would have given consumers the wrong impression that this product is ânatural,â â said Urvashi Rangan, director of the unionâs Consumer Safety Group in a statement. âThe term âcorn sugarâ simply doesn't reflect the chemical changes that take place in production. Consumers know the term high-fructose corn syrup, and they should be able to easily differentiate among products that use it.â
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