Latest News

Nestle recalls infant formula in Africa, Americas and Asia

Nestle recalls infant formula in Africa, Americas and Asia
Nestle recalls infant formula in Africa, Americas and Asia

Nestle has expanded its recall of certain batches of infant nutrition products beyond Europe. It now includes Africa, Americas, and Asia.

Nestle recalled batches of SMA formula, BEBA formula, NAN formula, and Alfamino formulation because they may have been contaminated with cereulide. This toxin can cause nausea and vomiting.

Health warnings have been issued in 37 countries including the majority of European states, Australia, Brazil and China.

The recall puts more pressure on KitKat, Nescafe and its new CEO Philipp Navratil who is trying to restore growth with a portfolio review following management changes. Nestle shares are down 5.7% this week.

The Brazilian health ministry stated?on Tuesday that the Nestle recall was a preventative action after the toxin was detected in products from the Netherlands.

Nestle Australia stated that the batches it recalled were manufactured in Switzerland. Nestle China, on the other hand, said it was recalling formula batches imported to Europe.

According to a notice issued by the National Consumer Commission of South Africa, the NAN?infant formulation being recalled is a product that was manufactured in June 2025. It has a shelf life of approximately 18 months.

The commission also said that the product was exported to Namibia and Eswatini.

Austria's Health Ministry said on Tuesday that Nestle had recalled 800 products or more from "more than 10 factories" and this was the largest recall in its history. Nestle's spokesperson was unable to confirm this.

Nestle announced on Tuesday that they had tested the arachidonic oil and oil mixtures used to produce their potentially affected infant nutrition after a problem was found in an ingredient supplied by a major supplier.

The company is ramping up its production and activating other suppliers to ensure a steady supply. Reporting by Alexander Marrow, Igor Sodre and Sfundo Parakozov in Sao Paulo. Editing by Alexander Smith & David Goodwin.

(source: Reuters)