The Kraft Heinz Co. announced it will not launch any new products in the U.S. with Food, Drug & Cosmetic colors, effective immediately, and will remove the remaining FD&C colors from its U.S. product portfolio before the end of 2027.
To date, nearly 90 percent of Kraft Heinz’s U.S. products are free of FD&C colors (by net sales). For the small portion of products that contain them, the company has invested significant resources, mobilizing a team to address this challenge with a three-pronged approach:
- Removing colors where it is not critical to the consumer experience; or
- Replacing FD&C colors with natural colors; or
- Reinventing new colors and shades where matching natural replacements are not available.
“As a food company with a 150-plus year heritage, we are continuously evolving our recipes, products and portfolio to deliver superiority to consumers and customers,” said Pedro Navio, North America president at Kraft Heinz.
“The vast majority of our products use natural or no colors, and we’ve been on a journey to reduce our use of FD&C colors across the remainder of our portfolio. In fact, we removed artificial colors, preservatives and flavors from our beloved Kraft Mac & Cheese back in 2016.
“Our iconic Heinz Tomato Ketchup has never had artificial dyes – the red color comes simply from the world’s best tomatoes. Above all, we are focused on providing nutritious, affordable and great-tasting food for Americans and this is a privilege we don’t take lightly.”
Given FD&C colors have a history of approval by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, Kraft Heinz has used the colors in a small number of products. As part of this process, the company also is working with licensees of its brands to encourage them to remove the colors.
Commitment to quality and nutrition
Kraft Heinz sources the most tomatoes in the U.S., all grown in California, for products like Heinz Tomato Ketchup. Claussen pickles (cucumbers) are grown in Ohio and Michigan; Ore-Ida potatoes are grown in Idaho; and the dairy for Philadelphia cream cheese comes from farms in Upstate New York.
Kraft Heinz has made progress innovating and renovating its products to improve their nutritional profiles in recent years. The company has made changes to more than 1,000 product recipes to add protein and fiber, and reduce sugar, salt and saturated fat.
Through these changes, Kraft Heinz is on track to reduce nearly 55 million pounds of sugar across its portfolio by the end of this year.
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