Title: Issues Affecting the Fat and Oil Industry
1Issues Affecting the Fat and Oil Industry
- by
- Robert M. Reeves, President
- Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils
- at the
- American Fats and Oils Association (AFOA)
- October 17, 2007
2UPDATE ON TRANS FATS
3Major Trans Fat Reformulation Stimuli
- FDA Trans Fat Labeling Rule effective 1-1-06
- Added trans fat to nutrition facts panel of food
label - New York City ban on trans fats in food service
sector - Spreads, cooking oils and shortenings used for
spreads and frying to contain less than 0.5 g/s
trans fat by 7-1-07 - Oils and shortening used for deep frying yeast
dough and cake batter and all other foods
containing trans fats affected by 7-1-08
4Aftermath of NYC Health Code on Trans Fats
- 16 states have proposed TFA regulations
- 23 municipalities or counties have proposed
ordinances or health codes - Over 25 school districts have proposed standards
affecting TFA levels in ingredients or foods
served - Miscellaneous restrictions Hospitals, theme
parks, county fairs
5Cities/Counties having passedRegulatory
Initiatives on TFA
- New York City, NY
- Albany, NY
- Brookline, MA
- Philadelphia, PA
- Montgomery County, MD
- King County, WA (Seattle area)
- Calgary Health Region, Canada
- Nassau County, NY
6Trans Fat Alternatives
- Naturally stable oils or fats
- Trait-enhanced vegetable oils
- Blends of more stable oils with less stable oils
- Interesterification of blends
- Modification of processing methods
- Gels, emulsifiers and other texture-building
agents
7Naturally Stable Oils
- Canola (high oleic)
- Coconut
- Corn
- Cottonseed
- Palm
- Palm kernel
- Peanut
- Rice bran
- Soybean (low linolenic)
- Sunflower (high oleic)
8Trait Enhanced Oilseed Varieties Availability
- Current Future
- Low linolenic soy Mid and high oleic soy
- High oleic canola Low lin, low saturate soy
- High stearic soy and canola
9Blends of More Stable Oils with
Less Stable Oils
- 15 fully hydrogenated hardstock (no trans fat)
mixed with 85 unhydrogenated liquid oil. - Interesterification to rearrange fatty acids on
glycerin molecules in blends to customize melt
points - Blend of palm oil fractions and other vegetable
oils (canola, soy, sunflower)
10Low Linolenic Soy Acreage/Oil Production
Estimates (2007)
- Seed Developer Acres Oil (M lbs.)
- Pioneer (TreusTM) 250,000 125
- Monsanto (VistiveTM) 1,500,000 750
- Iowa State (AsoyiaTM) 50,000 25
- 900
11Low Linolenic Soy Acreage/Oil Production
Estimates (2008)
- Target 3 million acres soybeans (all
varieties) - 1.5 billion pounds of oil
- Estimates subject to demand and level of
contractual agreements with soybean farmers.
12Canadian High Oleic Canola Acreage/Oil Production
Estimates
- Acres (M) Oil (lbs.)
- 2004 1.0 624 M
- 2005 1.5 936 M
- 2006 1.6 1.0 B
- 2007 2.0 1.25 B
- 2008 2.5 1.5 B
13U.S. Palm Oil Imports
- Year Metric Tonnes Pounds (B)
- (Calendar)
- 2004 271,185 0.596
- 2005 420,209 0.924
- 2006 629,455 1.384
- 2007 750,000 ? 1.650
- 10 non-edible use (e.g., oleochemical)
- 30 non-edible use (e.g., oleochemical,
biodiesel)
14American Heart Association Activities
- Trans Fat Alternatives Conference, Washington,
D.C., October 2006 - "Face the Fats" campaign initiated April, 2007
- Web-based campaign to educate consumers on how to
minimize trans fat intake without increasing
saturated fat consumption
15Center for Science in the Public Interest
Activities on TFA
- Tested french fries from NYC restaurants in late
July, '07, to determine trans fat and saturated
fat content. - Results Sat. Fat. g/s Trans, g/s
- McDonalds 4.0 0.2
- Burger King 5.3 3.3
- Wendy's 4.7 3.7
- CSPI activity indicates compliance with NYC's
Health Code will be "enforced" by consumer groups
16Puerto Rico Bans TFA and Hydrogenated Oils in
Restaurants
- Legislation approved March 12, 2007 contains the
following language - "No food that contains hydrogenated fat or
trans fat shall be stored, distributed, retained
for service, used in the preparation of any food
on the menu, or served in any establishment,
except for food which is served directly to the
clients in the original sealed package of the
manufacturer."
17Myths and Misconceptions of Trans Fats in the
Media
- Obesity caused by trans fat consumption
- "0 grams trans fat per serving" means no trans
fat in food product - "Partially hydrogenated" and "hydrogenated" fats
synonymous with trans fats
18New York City Calorie Labeling Code Overturned
- Federal judge invalidated Code requiring caloric
content of foods be listed on menus and menu
boards of restaurants already supplying such
information on websites, pamphlets or other means - Grounds for decision Conflict with federal
regulations - New York Restaurant Association brought suit
against NYC
19New York City Calorie Labeling Code Overturned
(Continued)
- Unlikely to affect trans fat code
- Appeal of ruling planned by NYC
20Conclusions
- Majority of basic trans fat alternatives
currently in marketplace - Current focus on improving product performance
and expanding product lines - Municipal and county trans fat bans/restrictions
likely to continue in short term - Consumer advocacy groups will "help" cities and
counties "enforce" their codes - Trans fat content in American diet is decreasing
due to significant reformulation in packaged
foods and food service sectors
21Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Chemical
Security Interim Final Rule (4-2-07)
- Applies to chemical facilities broadly defined as
establishments that possess or plan to possess a
quantity of a chemical substance determined to be
potentially dangerous - Establishes risk-based performance standards for
facilities - Creates "chemicals of interest" list (Appendix A)
- Lists over 200 chemicals and threshold amounts
22Content of Rule
- Listed chemicals include those commonly used in
food facilities (e.g., chlorine, anhydrous
ammonia, hydrogen, propane, boron triflouride) - If facility is deemed a high risk, a security
vulnerability assessment is required - Food facilities anticipated to be categorized as
minimal risk (Category 4)
23FOOD SAFETY LEGISLATION
24FDA Amendments Act of 2007 (HR 3580)
- Sponsored by Rep. John Dingell (D-MI) Chair-man,
House Energy and Commerce Committee - Imposes stricter requirements on imported foods
and drugs - Limit ports of entry to 13
- User fees placed on food imports to fund
inspections - Tests performed at entry ports to detect pathogens
25FDA Amendments Act of 2007 (HR 3580) (Contin
ued)
- Establishes "Reportable Food Registry" containing
information supplied by manufacturers or
regulatory officials on foods for which there is
a reasonable probability that they are
adulterated - Signed into law 9-27-07
26Safe Food Act of 2007 (HR 1148) (S-654)
- Sponsored by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Rep.
Rosa DeLaura (D-Conn) - Consolidates authority for food safety into a
single food agency, the "Food Safety
Administration" - Plans to insert provision in 2007 Farm Bill to
end the authority for all Federal food protection
agencies in two years - Year 1 plan for changes in food safety system
- Year 2 implement plan
27EPA's Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasure
(SPCC) Rule Update
- July 1, 2009 new deadline for facilities to amend
and implement SPCC plans - Applies to facilities handling 1,320 gallons of
oil above ground or 42,000 gallons of oil below
ground - Proposed amendments to consider differentiation
of integrity testing of AFVO storage tanks
meeting certain criteria and FDA regulatory
requirements
28RENEWABLE FUEL IMPACT ON OILSEEDS
29Renewable Fuel Impact on Oilseed and other Crop
Plantings - 2007
- 2007 2006
- Crop Acres (M) Acres (M) Change
- Corn 92.90 81.80 11.9
- Soybeans 64.10 72.00 - 11.0
- Wheat 60.50 57.20 5.8
- Cotton 11.60 14.25 - 22.4
- Rice 2.74 3.38 - 18.9
- Source FSA, ERS, USDA
30U.S. Biofuel Industry Expanding Faster than
Expected
Source Renewable Fuels Association, National
Biodiesel Board
31U.S. Biodiesel Production vs. Capacity
- June 2007
- 148 companies/plants in existence 1.4 billion
gallons of capacity - 96 companies/plants under construction, expansion
1.9 billion gallons of capacity
Source National Biodiesel Board
32U.S. Ability to Meet Total Biodiesel Capacity
- U.S. capacity 3.3B gals by 2008
- 3.3B gals x 7.5 lbs. oil/gal biodiesel 24.75B
lbs oil - Total veg oil/animal fat production in U.S.
27.7B lbs in 2006 - Current capacity for biodiesel production could
use 89.4 of U.S. veg oil/animal fat production
(27.7B lbs) - Inadequate amounts of veg oil/animal fats to
operate all of biodiesel plants on stream by
2008 and eat!
33Percent of Soybean Oil Supply Used in Biodiesel
Production
Source USDA
34Soybean Oil Ending Stocks
Source USDA
35December 2007 Soybean Oil up 40 percent since
last Fall
36Conclusions for Renewable Fuels
- High corn prices affecting soybean acreage, thus
soy oil supplies and resultant prices - Strong demand for biodiesel and foods pressuring
vegetable oil prices upward - U.S. biodiesel capacity unlikely to be met short
term - Biofuels will need continued government support
to remain viable - Vegetable oil prices likely to remain high for
near term