A number of Coca-Cola products have been removed from supermarket shelves over concerns of high-levels of the chemicals ...
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) confirmed there had been limited distribution of the affected products to the UK..
The Food and Drug Administration has confirmed that no soft drinks contaminated with chlorate from a Coca-Cola bottling plant in Europe were imported into Thailand.Last month, Coca-Cola recalled some ...
The recall affects cans and glass bottles in the Benelux, Britain, Germany, France. How chlorate occurs in food and drinks, ...
Coca-Cola products in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands have been recalled after being discovered to have "high ...
Elevated amounts of the chemical were found in some soft drinks sold in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.
Coca-Cola has recalled some of its soft drinks in Europe after higher-than-normal levels of a chemical called chlorate were ...
Long term consumption of chlorate can lead to an iodine deficiency, which could potentially cause a harmful or negative health impact, such as a goitre, which is a lump or swelling at the front of the ...
But now the soda is attracting fresh attention after the Food Standards Agency (FSA) yesterday launched an investigation into potential chlorate contamination. It came hours after Coca-Cola ...
Coca-Cola products have been recalled in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands due to high levels of chlorate and an ...
It is feared the drinks may contain 'elevated levels' of the chemical chlorate. The move has come just days after several of the manufacturer's drinks, like Fuze Tea, Fanta and Coca-Cola were ...
Coca-Cola has not disclosed the precise levels of chlorate detected in the affected batches of its products. However, ...