Hershey dumps sugar beets because of GM concerns
MINNEAPOLIS – Something was different about a lot of the Hershey’s kisses in your stocking this Christmas: The popular chocolates no longer contain sugar made in Minnesota.
For decades, the Hershey Co. has used sugar made from both sugar beets and sugar cane, but it decided in 2015 to stop buying beet sugar because it comes from genetically modified, or GM, seeds that some consumers don’t like.
Hershey, with 2014 sales of $7.4 billion and more than 80 brands of candy sold around the world, was a huge customer for beet sugar farmers, and its decision was significant enough to be noted at two annual shareholder meetings of sugar beet cooperatives.
David Berg, president and CEO of American Crystal Sugar in Moorhead, Minnesota, the nation’s largest sugar beet co-op, told members gathered in Fargo, North Dakota, that the anti-GM movement is one of the industry’s biggest challenges. And Kurt Wickstrom, president and CEO of Minn-Dak Farmers Cooperative in Wahpeton, North Dakota, said anti-GM groups are a real threat whose claims need to be countered.
Hershey communications director Jeff Beckman confirmed the kisses and many other products stocked on shelves since Halloween no longer contain beet sugar. The company also is transitioning away from artificial to natural ingredients, he said.
“More than three-quarters of the sugar we are using today is cane sugar,” which is not genetically modified, he said, “and as we get into 2016, our expectation is to be at or near 100 percent.”
No matter how or where the company sources the sugar, it’s still just going to say “sugar” on the product ingredient labels, he said.
Beckman said the sourcing switch has nothing to do with the safety of beet sugar, and the company’s website contains references to numerous scientific groups that have concluded GM sugar is safe to consume.
“This is really just a matter of listening to and being responsive to what consumers want us to put into their products,” he said.
Minnesota is the top sugar beet producer in the nation, followed by Idaho and North Dakota, and industry officials would not disclose how much of their sugar is sold to candy companies. About 55 percent of domestic U.S. sugar is produced from sugar beets, and nearly 100 percent of the beet seeds are genetically modified to tolerate the herbicide glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup.
Berg said in an interview that Hershey is the only national brand that has dropped beet sugar, although other companies have been asking questions and there has been a lot of chatter about GM sugar on social media.
“This could be a concern if it gets bigger and bigger, but at this point that’s all very speculative,” Berg said.
Even if it reached the point that other companies followed Hershey, Berg said, sugar beet growers can’t get non-GM seed anymore, and it would take years to produce.
“The supply of seed that is not genetically modified is extremely outdated and just not a viable option at all for raising sugar beets today,” he said.
Dean Bangsund, an economist at North Dakota State University, said the beet sugar industry generates nearly $5 billion annually in total economic activity in Minnesota and North Dakota, but it can’t afford to lose too many customers.
“If it’s just one domestic consumer, maybe there’s ways around that,” he said, but there’s reason to worry if rejecting beet sugar becomes a consumer trend.
“If the industry is forced to cut back production because it can’t find a market for its sugar, the economic effect would flow back through all stages of production here in the (Red River) Valley,” Bangsund said. It would affect the jobs of those who grow, process, transport, package and sell the sugar.
Part of the pressure on Hershey came from a coalition of groups called GMO Inside that began a campaign in 2013 suggesting that consumers tell Hershey and Mars, another large candy manufacturer, to drop all GM ingredients from their products.
Hershey made its decision as part of other changes in February. Mars has not made any announcements.
“Right now we don’t have immediate plans to target other companies, especially with sugar,” said Elizabeth O’Connell, campaigns director for Green America, one of the groups in the anti-GM coalition.