- Text
Green Tea Makers in Hot Water with FDA
(CBS)
(CBS/AP) Green tea is good for you, right?
Like grapes and dark chocolate, it's full of antioxidants, which eat up DNA-damaging free radicals like Pac-Man eats up pellets.
But the FDA says the makers of Lipton Green Tea and Canada Dry Sparkling Green Tea Ginger Ale have gone too far by making unsubstantiated nutritional claims.
PICTURES: 15 Deadliest Food Myths
In the case of the infused ginger ale, the FDA says the soda has no right to carry the claim that the drink is "enhanced with 200 mg of antioxidants from green tea and vitamin C" on its can, because the ingredients in the soda "are not nutrients with recognized antioxidant activity."
Unilever and the Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, the makers of the two beverages, are not alone. Manufacturers have increasingly been adding vitamins and nutrients to their products to make them more appealing to health-conscious consumers. The FDA stated that the agency "does not consider it appropriate to fortify snack foods such as carbonated beverages."
The FDA letter to Unilever, which owns Lipton, takes issue with a company website that mentions four studies that showed a cholesterol-lowering effect with tea. The agency calls the labeling misleading because it suggests Lipton tea is designed to treat or prevent disease. The agency also cites antioxidant labeling claims on the company's Lipton Green Tea, which do not follow U.S. federal guidelines.
The FDA asks executives from both companies to respond to the citations within 15 days and to outline their plans for addressing the problems.
Spokespersons for both the Dr. Pepper Snapple Group and Unilever issued separate statements indicating that they intend to cooperate to address the issues raised by the agency.
Once a niche market, nutrient-enriched beverages have grown into a multi-billion dollar business. In recent years, the FDA has begun cracking down on food companies that overstate the benefits of their products.
- Cancer drug reverses Alzheimer's in mice: Study
- Norovirus outbreak hits Rider University in N.J
- Chinese mom gives birth to 15-pound baby
- Marijuana-smoking motorists twice as likely to crash
- Electric shocks to brain may boost memory: Study
- America's sodium problem: Not from salty snacks?
- Caffeine inhalers - the next club drug?
- America's pets also have an obesity epidemic
- Measles patient at Super Bowl prompts health alert
- Skin cancer self-exam: What to look for (PHOTOS)
- Things You Didn't Know About Your Penis
- 4.5 million Americans over 50 have artificial knees
- PICTURES: 15 Shocking Sexual Fetishes
- Drinking soda raises risk for asthma, COPD: Study
- Let's Move! campaign turns 2 today: Is it working?
- Woman spotlights uterus didelphys on talk show
- Dr. Liar? Study finds dishonest docs common
- Suspect testifies in ND gun-in-courtroom case
- Washington state poised to approve gay marriage
- AP: Pa. rep says he'll resign when sentenced
- Picht named bureau chief in Minn., Neb., Dakotas
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
on CBS News










