Potato cheats have had their chips
Tuesday 16 December 2003
Action taken against potato cheats, following an FSA survey that found significant mislabelling of potatoes, has had a welcome effect in forcing errant suppliers to clean up their act.
The Agency first tackled the hot potato of mislabelling earlier this year with a survey of potato samples in February and April in 30 regional locations in England, Wales and Scotland.
This first survey found that 33% of potatoes were labelled incorrectly, including 17% that were not the variety they were claimed to be. In some cases this led to consumers paying higher prices for premium products when actually they were being given cheaper varieties.
In the light of the FSA findings, local authority enforcement staff followed up cases where labelling information was lacking or inaccurate and reminded retailers of their responsibility to ensure they receive the correct information from their suppliers to allow them to label their products for sale correctly.
The latest FSA survey, of potatoes collected in June 2003, found that the situation has improved and that only 11% of samples were labelled as the wrong variety (17% in the earlier survey). Another 11% were not labelled with sufficient information (16% in the earlier survey).
The Agency and enforcement authorities will keep the situation under review.
