the cracker - international nut and dried fruit council
TRANSCRIPT
Monaco Welcomes INC 29-31 May
U.S. Peanut Industry Tackles Recall Challenge
Global Trade Key to Growth
The CrackerApril 2009 v No. 2
The Official Voice of the International Nut and Dried Fruit Council Foundation for the World Nut and Dried Fruit Trade
April 2009 • The Cracker 3
World NewsCalifornia in serious drought; Pecan industry expands technical program with food
safety research; Macadamia symposium set for September, 2009 in South Africa;
California raw almonds must be pasteurized in North America says judge.
Peanut Recall Headlines ACFSQ MeetingDried fruit and tree nut industry who attended the American Council of Food Safety
and Quality annual meeting were warned that government regulators will respond
vigorously with increased inspections after recent peanut products recall.
Food Safety Survey HighlightsMore than 93 percent of U.S. consumers have heard reports about food safety issues
and recalls and 25 percent say the recalls will change their buying behavior; charts
outline consumer response in national survey.
INC Congress in Monaco 29-31 MayWorld economics and how the dried fruit and nut industry is responding to difficult
times ahead; taking a look inside the intricacies of managing a family business; and
Formula 1 racing legend David Coulthard will headline the 28th annual INC Congress
Program 29 – 31 May in Monaco.
World StatisticsApril 2009 Global Statistical Review and mid-way point on tree nuts and dried fruit consumption rates.
450 Attend Western Pistachio Association Meeting450 pistachio growers and other industry associates review issues like expanding
federal marketing order, trade opportunities in India, California drought challenges,
pistachio crop forecasts and the latest pistachio nutrition news at annual meeting.
BOARD OF DIRECTORSJack Mariani – Chairman Mariani Nut Company, USAGiles Hacking – Vice-Chairman CG Hacking & Sons Limited, UKJordi Martí – Treasurer & General Secretary Borges SAU, SpainAsadollah Asgaroladi Hassas Export Co. Ltd., IranArt Beavis Purtrade - International Marketing Consultants, AustraliaRemy Berrebi Mincol Ltd., IsraelPino Calcagni V. Besana SPA, ItalyBaljit Chadha Balcorp Limited, CanadaHelmut Dankert Max Kiene GmbH, GermanyGary Ford Diamond Foods INC, USAHuo Jianguo China Chamber of Commerce, ChinaErdinç Kapkaç Aegean Exporters Association, TurkeyBarry Kriebel Sun-Maid Growers of California, USAJohn R. Petersen J. R. Petersen LLC, USAAntonio Pont – Honorary President Borges SAU, SpainSabit Sabir Sabirlar Findik Ihracat Ltd. Sti., TurkeyBerton Steir Paramount – Roll International Corp, USAFrank Vaerewijck Q.M. Frank Vaerewijck BVBA, BelgiumKees van de Sandt C. Van de Sandt BV, NetherlandsDick Walden The Green Valley Pecan Company, USADouglas Youngdahl Blue Diamond Growers, USACuneyd Zapsu Balsu AS, Turkey
Executive CommitteeJack Mariani – ChairmanGiles Hacking – Vice-ChairmanPino CalcagniGary Ford Antonio PontDouglas YoungdahlCuneyd ZapsuGoretti Guasch – Executive Director
SenatorsHubert Berrebi, FranceJohn Cardassilaris, GreeceDieter Fels, GermanyRaul Gamon, FranceChris Hacking, UKWalter F. Payne, USAAbbas Rafii, LuxembourgDon Soetaert, USAJames Swink, USAJack Taillie, Netherlands
The Cracker Editorial CommitteeJack Mariani – ChairmanSusan Brauner, EditorGoretti Guasch, Advertising SalesSteve Wong, Designer
Legal Deposit: B-7497-1989
Permanent Secretariat of INCGoretti Guasch, Executive DirectorCalle Boule 2, 3ero, 43201 Reus, SpainTel: +34 977 331 416 Fax: +34 977 315 028E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.nutfruit.org
The Cracker is published three times a year by the International Tree Nut and Dried Fruit Council Foundation (Fundacio Privada International Tree Nut CIF G-43738475). This magazine including all articles and illustra-tions, is copyright protected. Any utilization beyond the light limits set by the Copyright Act is subject to publisher’s approval.
INTERNATIONAL NUT AND DRIED FRUIT COUNCIL FOUNDATION
The CrackerApril 2009
Edition 47
INC Secretariat News
INC Ambassadors
Advertisers
Nutrition Research
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CONTENTS
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81
Index
All trademarks, brand identities and graphic images shown in this publication are the property of their respective owners.
While the publishers believe that all information con-tained in this publication was correct at the time of going to press, they can accept no liability for any inaccuracies that may appear or loss suffered directly or indirectly by any reader as a result of any advertisement, editorial, photographs or other materials published in the Cracker.
4 The Cracker • April 2009
Chairman’s Commentary
GReeTINGS fRoM WINTeRS, CalIfoRNIa!By Jack Mariani, INC Chairman
It’s finally Spring and we now enter the speculative time of year when everyone begins to wonder what Mother Nature may bring us in the new 2009 crop season. Since January, the world has changed dramatically. World economic conditions continue to cloud the financial markets and make planning for the future more of a challenge than in past years. Some say that the food industry may be less affected than other industries, but only time will reveal how we may all be affected by the economic challenges ahead.
How the nut and dried fruit industries are coping with these difficult times will be one of many topics for discussion during the 28th Congress in Monaco May 29-31. In addition to our world experts who share the latest crop and consumption trends, we will listen to a noted speaker about how to manage the intricacies of a family business. This is especially intriguing to our industry where many organizations are owned and operated by multi-generational families. In fact, our industry is probably the oldest business operated by centuries of generations of families!
World economic trends and how to cope with them successfully will be another topical session. But the most entertaining session may be Formula 1 racing legend David Coulthard who will motivate us about how to lead a successful and happy life!
In this issue of The Cracker, you will learn more about food safety issues and allergens which continue to be a growing challenge in the US, EU, Asia and many other countries. The recent salmonella outbreak in assorted peanut products causing sickness and death resulted in the largest recall of food products in U S history. While rapid alert reports are made weekly in the EU, major food manufacturers and retailers are now demanding new and more detailed plant inspections and third party audits. Increased microbiological testing is also being required. The Cracker will take an inside look at how the peanut industry is communicating to consumers about this challenge.
The Scientific Committee of the INC will meet in Monaco on Friday May 29th from 9:00 AM to 2:30 PM to discuss these critical issues that affect our business. A panel of expert physicians and researchers will also discuss food safety topics from their perspectives to guide us about how we manage them in our own operations.
I encourage all INC members to continue to share with staff and customers the benefits of using the INC website Nutfruit.org. You will need your company password to log on. Once on the site, the most recent information is available for each tree nut and dried fruit to create sales or marketing presentations, receive the most recently published health research, check on the production of any commodity in any country or import or export of each item. The web site is truly the international source of information for tree nuts and dried fruits. There is more about this on page18.
We also continue to search for new investment opportunities in research and other projects that will help us to increase demand for all of our products. In partnership with Nucis Italy, INC has a multi-year initiative of Nutritional Education designed to raise the awareness of consumers about the health benefits of nuts and dried fruits. Over 440 Physicians have joined the project which is designed to reach patients with information about the health benefits of dried fruits and tree nuts. Newsletters about products, clinical studies and current research will be mailed monthly. The goal is to reach 1000 Physicians during 2009.
INC-NREF will be co-sponsoring a nuts and health symposium at the upcoming International Congress of Nutrition to be held in Bangkok, Thailand, this October. This important event is held every four years and unites researchers and policy makers worldwide. The symposium will highlight the latest scientific research on the health benefits of tree nuts. The goal is to stimulate more European, Australian, and Asian - based research on the relationship between increased tree nut consumption and decreased incidence of lifestyle diseases.
In addition to exploring the world challenges currently facing our industry and how to resolve them effectively, our Monaco Congress provides the perfect opportunity to meet and create memories of the world-class beauty of Monte Carlo, the South of France and Italy. It will be a congress to remember! See you there!
C
April 2009 • The Cracker 5
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April 2009 • The Cracker 7
1 CALIFORNIA DROUGHT BRINGS WATER LEVEL TO 64 PERCENT OF NORMALWORLD
NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
The amount of land dedicated to organic produce is growing due to government backing and market forces, opening up opportunities particularly in developing countries, according to a new report.
The latest statistics show that worldwide, 32.2m hectares were certified according to organic standards in 2007, which was 1.5m hectares more than the previous year, said the report from the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) and the Research Institute of Organic Agriculture (FiBL). The study called: “The World of Organic Agriculture: Statistics and Emerging Trends 2009” showed that by geographical region, growth was strongest in Latin America and Africa.
Dr Helga Willer, of the FiBL and an author of the report, said that production of cash crops such as coffee, cocoa and tropical fruit had increased by as much as 30 per cent. And the drivers behind the increase in organic farming were booming demand and policy support.
The global market for organic products reached an estimated $46bn in 2007 with most products being consumed in North America and Europe. In Europe the organically managed land area grew to almost 7.8m hectares (1.9 per cent of agricultural land) in 2007. Substantial increases were seen in Spain, Poland and the UK and countries with the highest number of farms and the largest organic land area was Italy, followed by Spain, Germany and the UK. Crops that played a significant role included olives, fruits, nuts, grapes and cereals.
GLOBAL ORGANIC SUPPLY GROWS
According to a news article from the California Capitol, based
on a recent water briefing to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger,:
…”As though the state’s fiscal problems aren’t daunting enough,
California’s top water officials gave Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger a
grim presentation showing that rain earlier
in the month has done little to lessen the
state’s worst drought in modern history. The officials, including Department of
Water Resources Director Lester Snow,
showed the GOP governor that at the
time of year when water levels should be
highest, Lake Oroville was at 66 percent of
normal, San Luis Reservoir at 51 percent
and Lake Shasta at 71 percent. On average,
reservoirs are at 56 percent of capacity.
Snowpack was at 90 percent as opposed
to 100 percent last year. But because this
is the third dry year in a row, parched
ground is soaking up run-off, leaving it at just 64 percent of the
level it should be.”
“Snow said that the storms of late February and early March
allow ed the State Water Project to increase its allocation to
20 percent. ‘It was after considerable deliberation we decided
to increase,’ Snow said . ‘We feel (the storms) provided enough
flexibility for us to announce 20 percent. We wanted to do that
because of concerns of economic impacts and broader concerns
to the Central Valley and Southern California in terms of water
reliability.’ Snow said if the State Water Project ended the year
with a final allocation of 20 percent, which he thinks it will, it
would mean ‘matching the lowest allocation in State Water Project
history.’”
“Fully meeting the demands of State Water Project users is
roughly 4 million acre feet. The 20 percent allocation is therefore
800,000 acre feet. One acre-foot is 326,000 gallons — enough
water to cover one acre of land, roughly a football field, with one
foot of water. It’s approximately the amount of water a family of
four uses in a year. Snow reiterated that this year’s 56 percent
of capacity at reservoirs is down from 61 percent last year.
The federally run Central Valley Project has already eliminated
water to its agricultural users and [has] halved deliveries to its
metropolitan and industrial users. Two years ago, the State Water
Project met 60 percent of water demand and 35 percent in 2008 .
“Schwarzenegger has called for water conservation and, last
year, declared drought conditions in the state. Schwarzenegger
was also shown findings by a University of California at Davis study
of the drought’s economic impact. The drought will cause farm
revenue to fall by $1.2 billion to $1.6 billion. Total income loss
this year will be between $1.6 billion and $2.8 billion and between
60,000 and 85,000 jobs will disappear. Water officials believe, at a
minimum, the low range of estimates is accurate.
To counter the contention by some that the current drought
isn’t as bad a previous ones, the report compares the current
drought to 1991 when the fifth year of a long-running drought
was the worst in 150 years. In February of 1991, the state began to
ration water. Water for farmers was cut off. In 1991, agricultural
losses totaled $500 million, according to the Department of
Water Resources. Catastrophe in 1991
was avoided by 40 days of rain, leading to
triple-than-normal precipitation in March –
the ‘March Miracle’ as it’s now known.”
“No such miracle appears headed to
California this year. Snow contrasted
conditions in 2009 with 1991. There are
9 million more California residents. There
is more demand for agricultural water as
farmers have shifted from row crops to
permanent crops and put an additional
400,000 acres under irrigation. Court
rulings to protect various species have
reduced the flexibility of moving water and climate change has led
to more extreme weather patterns and a smaller snowpack. Snow
said water deliveries this year have been reduced by 170,000 acre
feet to aid the Delta smelt, a consequence of one of those court
rulings.”
8 The Cracker • April 2009
2WORLD NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
PECAN INDUSTRY LEADERS ATTEND MID-WINTER MEETING
Almost every major sheller in the pecan industry was represented at the 2009 National Pecan Shellers Association(NPSA) Mid-Winter Meeting at the Gaylord Palms resort in Kissimmee, FL. Two days of educational programming featured experts on government affairs, consumer trends, supply chain management, resource conservation, plant management, shipping and logistics, food safety and quality control. Members were also treated to a special cooking demonstration by Peter Wimmler, executive pastry chef at the Gaylord Palms. The NPSA Board of Directors also agreed to continue its statistical program and expanded its technical program with an enhanced food safety research initiative. Julie Nargang was introduced at the board meeting as the new chair of the NPSA Marketing, Promotion and Research Committee (MPRC). Ms. Nargang is director of corporate marketing at John B. Sanfilippo and Son, Inc. where she oversees the company’s advertising, marketing and public relations initiatives. She holds a Masters Degree in Marketing from DePaul University. Former MPRC chair Buddy Adams of San Saba Pecan was honored during the General Session. Mr. Adams spent more than a decade directing the pecan industry’s Marketing, Promotion and Research Program. Under his leadership, the program helped transform the public perception of pecans from a fattening indulgence to a healthy addition to a balanced diet. Mr. Adams will continue to serve on the Committee. Five members were re-elected to serve on the Marketing, Promotion and Research Committee during the meeting. Buddy Adams of San Saba Pecan, LP; Ernesto Lozano Gonzalez of Procesadora Palma S.A. de C.V.; Jim Hamilton of Hamilton Ranches, Inc.; David Salopek of David Salopek Farms, LLC; and Bruce Caris of The Green Valley Pecan Company were re-elected to new two-year terms. The NPSA Annual Meeting is scheduled for September 10-12, 2009 at the Four Seasons Hotel in Chicago, IL. The NPSA is an international trade association dedicated to preserving, representing and promoting the interests of the pecan industry, in a strong and unified voice, to government, media, food industry, health professionals and consumers. For more information, contact NPSA Headquarters at 404-252-3663 or visit www.ilovepecans.org.
The Fourth International Macadamia Symposium will take place from 6 to 9 September 2009 in the Kruger National Park, South Africa, and will be hosted by the Southern African Macadamia Growers’ Association (SAMAC). As with the 1st International Macadamia Symposium, which took place in South Africa in 1999, the primary aim is to bring people within the international macadamia industry together from around the world to exchange information. The 4th International Macadamia Symposium will be held at Berg en Dal rest camp, which is situated on the Southern border of the Kruger National Park.
The preliminary program has been drafted, and the symposium will start on the Sunday afternoon with registration and an opening ceremony. On Monday and Tuesday there will be both oral and poster presentation sessions, and the event will close with a gala dinner on the Tuesday evening. An optional tour of the macadamia industry in South Africa will take place on the Wednesday.
Registrations closes on the 17th of July 2009 and costs involved differ, depending on your attendance of specific events. For more information, please refer to the website.
For any information regarding registration and accommodation, Ethne Cameron, [email protected] can be contacted. For general queries, as well as interested sponsors, please contact Chrisna Strydom, [email protected]
Please visit the official website of the symposium: www.4macadamia.com for all relevant information and updates.
4TH INTERNATIONAL MACADAMIA SYMPOSIUM
CALIFORNIA RAW ALMONDS MUST BE TREATED, JUDGE RULES
In a blow to organic almond producers and handlers, the Washington, D.C.- based judge rejected challenges to pasteurization requirements designed by the Almond Board of California. The Agriculture Department formally imposed the rules in March 2007.
The ruling issued by U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvell did not directly address the merits of the almond pasteurization standards. Instead, Huvell dismissed largely on technical grounds the complaint filed by Fresno-based farmer Nick Koretoff, Livington-based farmer Cynthia Lashbrook and others.
Huvell determined the farmers had failed to exhaust potential administrative remedies. Moreover, the judge said farmers might not have legal recourse even if they could prove the safety rules would cause economic injury. “Their fundamental concern is with the impact of the treatment regulation on their ability to sell their almonds in a niche organic market at a premium,” Huvelle noted, adding that “the Supreme Court (has) specifically recognized that not every loss would qualify as a deprivation of a definite personal right of the producer.”
While contamination in almonds is not common, the industry determined that aggressive measures were necessary to prevent any other occurrences. The 2001 salmonella outbreak first identified in Canada was traced back to bulk raw almonds. A second salmonella outbreak in 2004 resulted in the recall of 15 million pounds of almonds. Consumer confidence falls with every food scare.
April 2009 • The Cracker 9
Australian Macadamias are set for a bumper crop
Australian Macadamias
Please come and visit the Australian macadamia team in 2009 and find out how you can be part of the macadamia action at:
• Winter Fancy Foods San Francisco January 18–20
• Fruit Logistica Hall 25 B10 Berlin February 4–6
• NRA Chicago May 16–19
• Asia Fruit Logistica Hong Kong Sept 2–4
• ANUGA Cologne Oct 10–15
For more information about the Australian macadamia crop and market development activities contact:
Australian Macadamia Societywww.macadamias.org or your Australian Macadamia exporter.
The Australian macadamia industry is anticipating a 45,000 tonne nut in shell crop in 2009 which
will yield almost 14,000 MT of precious kernel for world markets. Most growing regions are reporting good rainfall and a high nut set raising the expectations of a very good harvest from April.
The demand for macadamias in Europe reached a record 6,000 MT in 2008 which was 24% above the previous year due to mainly widened distribution in retail chains and increased use in value added products. Macadamia nuts now account for 16.2% of the value generated from the noble nut category in German retail supermarkets according to Nielsen data.
The Australian macadamia industry is providing on going market support through media and in store promotions in Europe and other markets to drive consumer demand.
In Japan the Australian macadamia industry is launching a new consumer focused promotion in January 2009 using cutting edge internet based activities to reinvigorate the market and encourage consumers to discover the real health and beauty attributes of the macadamia nuts that research shows are not well understood.
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10 The Cracker • April 2009
3 4000+ EU HEALTH CLAIMS ON HOLD?WORLD
NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
HOW GLOBAL CONSUMERS VIEW DIGESTIVE HEALTH
The European Union nutrition and health claims process will
not meet its January, 2010, deadline as there are simply too many
to process by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), the
bloc’s executive arms, according to Brussels-based consultancy,
EAS.
The European Commission has set itself to evaluate 1024
generic article 13 claims by the end of July, a further 468 claims by
the end of November, leaving 2693 claims that EFSA has sent back
to the EC and member states for further clarification. “The volume
of claims and currently proposed evaluation time-lines illustrate
that it will prove difficult for the European Commission to adopt
its ‘Community list’ of generic health claims by the end of January
2010, the official deadline set by the EU claims Regulation,” said
EAS officials. They added, “Although the Commission has not yet
officially announced a delay, this will be inevitable, meaning also a
longer transition period for the permitted continued use of health
claims that are in line with formerly existing national rules.
If the deadline is breached it would bring few changes to the
EU’s 27-member bloc, as member state rulings would continue to
apply until the matter is resolved at EU level. Only in 2011, when
transition periods are factored in, would the “climate for claims”
be altered drastically according to the report. This could mean
more stringent rules for health claims innovations.
EFSA only published its finalised article 13 list this year that
include generic nutrient claims such as calcium is good for your
bones. Click here to see that list. So far EFSA has issued five article
13.5 opinions which relate to new product claims. These have all
been negative including one linking black tea and focus of attention
and another linking probiotic consumption and gastrointestinal
discomfort. EFSA has also delivered 42 article 14 disease reduction
and children’s claim verdicts, most of which have also failed to
impress the Parma-based risk assessment agency.
The EC’s General Food Law section of the Standing Committee
on the Food Chain and Animal Health (SCFCAH) recently processed
its first batch of 21 EFSA health claim opinions, including 14
negative and seven positive opinions. The SCFCAH is comprised
of representatives of the EU’s 27 member states, and it has the
capacity to challenge EFSA’s opinions from a risk management
point of view.
The fact the SCFCAH found no issue with EFSA’s opinions may be
of concern to industry given the large number of negative opinions
issued by EFSA to date, particularly in regard to article 14 claims,
of which the Parma-based assessor has principally concerned itself
so far. After claims are voted on by the European Parliament they
can then be written into the EU register and be authorised for use
across the bloc.
What digestive health has, that many other purported functional
foods health benefits do not, is a near-instantaneous health effect.
Consumers with digestive health issues draw real benefits from
probiotic and prebiotic products that, if consumed at the right
doses, generally deliver on their functional promise.
That is the key driver. In a world where a fair level of consumer
scepticism remains toward many functional foods, probiotics
have a rare level of trust. According to the American College of
Gastroenterology, 95m people in the US suffer from digestive
problems. Some 60m are thought to suffer from heartburn, and
50m from irritable bowel syndrome. In addition, it is estimated
that around 20m people suffer from stomach ulcers. Gut health
products have a very real benefit on these conditions. Immunity
benefits ar clinically backed also.
The other key ingredients in gut health are prebiotics – typically
fibre-based ingredients that function as starter cultures for the
development of healthy bacteria within the gut. These products have
branched out from their baked products core and moved into new
areas such as dairy and bars. An International Food Information
Council survey found 77 per cent of people are actively trying
to add fibre to their diets even as US Department of Agriculture
figures show only one fifth of
Americans get enough fibre in
their diet.
Products aimed at gut
health have traditionally been
much more popular in Europe
than North America, but this is
changing as Americans embrace the idea of boosting gut health via
foods and beverages. Europe still leads the way in terms of product
launches and market value, but North America is catching up.
Statistics obtained from Mintel show there have been 171
digestive health product launches in North America in 2008
compared to 133 in 2007. In 2006 there were 59 debuts, 19 in
2005 and only one in 2003.
Much of this revenue continues to be drawn from Europe where
digestive health remains a stellar category, although no longer rising
as quickly as North America, or for that matter, Latin America and
Asia. Mintel’s analysis reveals there were 511 launches in Europe in
2008. In 2007 there were 690, 454 in 2006, and 280 in 2005 and
15 in 2003. Digestive health is not being lost on the growing middle
classes of Latin America and Asia, especially Latin America where
the year so far has seen 133 launches compared with 136 in 2007
and 28 in 2005. Asia is rising from a lower base but has 32 debuts
for the year compared with 26 in 2007 and four in 2004. Across all
regions there have been 2057 digestive health launches this year.
12 The Cracker • April 2009
4WORLD NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
US–DANISH ALLIANCE GOOD FOR NUTS | DRIED FRUIT
A new consortium of leading American and Danish food scientists has been established to develop new ingredients for tackling malnutrition and diet-related diseases. The Transatlantic Foods for Health project is a collaboration between scientists at the University of California, Davis, and four Danish Universities, intended to draw on the two nations’ complementary areas of food research expertise. The plan is to develop healthier foods and foods with added health benefits through a combination of different research approaches. One of the program participants is associate professor and lipidologist Lars Hellgren of the Department for Systems Biology at the Technical University of Denmark who says: “While we in Denmark are very strong on general and technological issues, our colleagues in California are strong on the medical, clinical side. Combining the two together creates an enormous synergy.” Part of the group’s research is expected to focus on ingredients said to produce specific health benefits, such as the effects of fibers and antioxidants produced from biomass on gut flora, and to examine their effects on a molecular level. Other areas which are expected to be put under the spotlight include ingredients’ effects on the immune system and cardiovascular health, as well as those that help weight loss or prevent weight gain. In this area, the group says it will be looking at ways ingredients can improve satiety, speed metabolism or reduce the amount of fat that is absorbed from foods by the body. Nuts and dried fruit may have an opportunity to collaborate with its myriad nutrition research. “It is partly about single ingredients but it’s also about combining ingredients in the right way,” said Hellgren. “I’m interested in fatty acids. The benefits of fatty acids and omega-3 in particular are very well documented, but there is still an issue about how we get it into the food and finding the best formulation.” He said that although the food industry is not formally involved with the project, both the Danish researchers and Americans “have very strong links with the food industry” in their respective countries. Apart from researching ingredients that could help deal with weight-related illnesses, the project also aims to tackle issues of malnutrition. UC Davis nutrition professor and director of the Foods for Health Institute M.R.C. Greenwood said: “This is not about just adding more vitamin A to carrots… Often, consumers have to pay up to 20 times more for 1,000 healthy calories in fruit and vegetables than they would pay for 1,000 unhealthy calories in, for example, fast food. We have to look at how we get more healthy properties into food that is safe, convenient and economically accessible.” Greenwood also underlined the importance of continuing to work together with the food industry in order to produce more foods that fit with nutritional guidelines.
NUTS AND SEEDS RANK HIGH FOR NEW PRODUCTS
International research business Datamonitor has done some handy work on new product launches, giving brands a heads up on what the product trends are for the coming year. Datamonitor has looked at what’s been launched around the world over the past year and has come up with some good pointers for 2009. Although the data lie mostly in food and drink sectors, there are lessons for all consumer goods. Key categories for the coming year are beauty foods and drinks, detox products and concentrated liquid cleaners that cut costs and help the environment. Being clean and beautiful on the inside and on the outside seems to be a significant trend, as is relaxing through the credit crunch. The use of some words is important, too. The word “eco,” is increasingly used, and don’t forget to repeat the word “brain” at every opportunity. Datamonitor’s product launch analytics suggest the following are among the trend-setting categories for the year ahead: Nuts and seeds Nuts, once avoided for too much fat and associations with allergies, are now hailed as nutritional powerhouses, which is why they are showing up in more new product launches, along with such seeds as flax, sunflower and pumpkin. Expect more rustic-looking snack bars.
SHOEI TO REOPEN PRUNE PLANT AS A WALNUT PROCESSING PLANT
After announcing its closure of a prune processing plant last December, ShoEi Foods USA, INC will form a Joint Venture with Sunsweet Growers to convert its 50-acre facility in Olivehurst, California to walnut shelling and processing for the 2009 crop. ShoEi is the leading importer of walnuts in Japan and China and was first to introduce California walnuts to Japan, making it the largest market for shelled walnuts outside of the US. Don Soetaert, Chairman of ShoEi, explained that ShoEi could not let its assets idle while many walnut growers(some already growing prunes for ShoEi), encouraged ShoEi to buy their walnut crops. Some of ShoEi’s workforce could also be re-employed, making it a winning proposition for both growers and employees. “We also have equipment that can be used, but we will invest an additional $3.5 million in state-of-the-art technology to serve the worldwide walnut market within the next six months,” explained Soetaert who added that ShoEi will be interviewing walnut growers over the next few weeks to obtain a targeted supply level for the first year operation. “We are especially interested in family owned growers with a high quality record who prefer a long term and stable home to join the financially strong ShoEi family.” A 103-year old business, ShoEi Foods Corporation of Japan is a publicly owned company with more than $800 million in sales. It is an importer, wholesaler, and manufacturer in Japan and China with a total of 11 plants, including an all-nut processing plant in Japan and a pine nut plant in China. It also buys nearly $100 million of California grown commodities annually. Dried fruits and nuts have traditionally been its core commodities among more than 9000 items offered in Japan. ShoEi is also a prune and walnut grower in Olivehurst.
April 2009 • The Cracker 13
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14 The Cracker • April 2009
5WORLD NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
MAGAZINE ADS SKEWED TO UNHEALTHY FOODS
BARRY CALLEBAUT OPENS MEXICAN CHOCOLATE PLANT
Barry Callebaut moves closer to local food manufacturers in Mexico, unveiling its third largest chocolate production facility worldwide to spear the emerging, and attractive, Mexican chocolate confectionery market. The Swiss firm – that expands in step with its customers – has invested over $3 million in the new industrial chocolate facility, based at Monterrey in the north-eastern Mexican state of Nuevo Leon. “Chocolate confectionery in Mexico is expected to grow on average by 6.5 per cent per year in value terms over the next five years,” according to market researcher Euromonitor. At a time when chocolate consumption in the US and Europe is falling due to the economic crisis, the chocolate industry is pinning hopes on emerging markets such as Mexico, Russia, India and China to bring a boost to the bottom line. With an annual capacity of around 100,000 tonnes, Callebaut’s new Mexican facility will supply Central and South American chocolate markets previously fed by the firm’s facilities in North America. Sourcing some cocoa from Brazil, but also from Africa, the supply needs will depend on customer demand. An industrial chocolate plant, no consumer products will be produced at the Mexican facility . They will continue to be imported from North America and the EU. With the new Mexican plant now online Zurich-based Barry Callebaut currently has about 40 facilities - including cocoa processing and chocolate facilities - worldwide. The facility is designed to manufacture industrial chocolate – liquid and moulded chocolate – as well as compound. Barry Callebaut expects capacity utilisation at the plant to rise rapidly and reach 60 to 70 per cent by the end of fiscal year 2009/10, aiming for full capacity to be reached within five years. The chocolate industry is generally buoyed by the notion that in times of recession consumers continue to be tempted by small chocolate indulgences, enabling chocolate players to weather an economic downturn. But the International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO) suggested the economy’s impact on chocolate consumption in the coming year would be difficult to predict.
Food manufacturers are being asked to take some responsibility for public health and make more nutritional products after a study found that magazine adverts were mainly for foods high in sugar, fat and salt. Product types advertised did not reflect a balanced diet as healthier foods such as fruit and vegetables made up only a fraction of the adverts, according to the study published online in the European Journal of Public Health. For the study called “Socio-economic and gender differences in nutritional content of foods advertised in popular UK weekly magazines”, researchers compared data on the nutritional content of foods advertised in 30 of the most widely-read weekly magazines during November 2007. The nutritional analysis found that the foods being promoted were generally much higher in sugar and salt, and lower in fibre than the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations. The results showed that 25.5 per cent of the adverts were for ready-meals, sauces and soups which tend to be high in salt and sugar. And 23 per cent were categorized as “containing fat or sugar” including products such as ice-cream, chocolate bars, sweets and full sugar soft drinks. However, government guidelines recommend these should be eaten only “sparingly”. Only 1.8 per cent was for fruit and vegetables which were mainly in high-end magazines. A source said that foods such as fruit and vegetables aren’t advertised so much because they do not have big food manufacturers behind them.
HEART HEALTH MARKET BIG IN ASIA
The buoyancy of the European heart health ingredients market is being matched by some Asian countries where western-style diets and lifestyles are taking hold and bringing concomitant health problems.
This was particularly the case in urban areas of China, India and some south east Asian countries where affluence is on the rise such as Malaysia and Thailand. This report follows comments in a recent Frost & Sullivan report that valued the European heart health ingredients market at €421m in 2007 and growing at 20 per cent. “One-in two adults have high blood pressure in some European countries such as Germany and Spain,” said Luc van der Heyden, DSM business manager of heart health.
“In China the rate is only one-in-four but it is growing much faster,” according to reports. In North America the rate is about one-in-three. “North America and Europe remain our biggest markets but Asia is increasingly important as is Eastern Europe which has well-documented heart health problems.”
Half of the world’s population could face food shortages by the end of this century due to climate change, a new study warned. According to researchers, there is a 90 percent probability that by 2100 the minimum temperatures in the tropics and sub-tropical regions will be higher than the maximums so far recorded in those areas. The affect on crop-growing in those regions would be dire, according to the projections based on direct observations and data culled from 23 computer models on the planet’s evolving climate patterns. “The stresses on global food production from temperature alone are going to be huge, and that doesn’t take into account water supplies stressed by the higher temperatures,” said David Battisti, a University of Washington atmospheric sciences professor. “We are taking the worst of what we’ve seen historically and saying that in the future it is going to be a lot worse unless there is some kind of adaptation,” added Rosamond Naylor, director of Stanford University’s Program on Food Security and the Environment. In the tropics, the warmest temperatures will cut maize and rice harvests by 20 to 40 percent, the researchers said. The hotter weather will also reduce the moisture in the soil, cutting yields even further. Some three billion people, or half the world’s population, currently live in tropical and sub-tropical regions, and their number is set to double by the end of the century. These regions stretch from northern India, southern China to much of Australia and all of Africa, and also extend from the southern United States to northern Argentina and southern Brazil.
FOOD SHORTAGES THREATEN WORLD POPULATION
16 The Cracker • April 2009 C
6WORLD NUT & DRIED FRUIT NEWS
member of industry group Chocolate Council of the National Confectioners Association. The council’s members represent more than 90% of the chocolate processed in the U.S. Most consumers are unaware of the difference between smaller specialty and larger premium chocolate manufacturers, according to some analysts. Though consumption continues, consumers are failing to respond to gimmicks and unessential quality assurance in premium chocolate as budgets feel the squeeze. The shine of chocolate health claims are expected to fade as consumers become desensitized to the fad of value-added superfoods. Additionally, fair trade-certified chocolate is less attractive amid economic uncertainty. Fair-trade products pledge to pay producers a price higher than the typical market rate for commodities such as cocoa and coffee. But competition will continue in the premium chocolate arena as private-label premium chocolates may have the advantage. The chocolates, sold under trusted chain-store labels or in retail locations with an exclusive brand, are typically less expensive than the major brands but have the same quality.
PREMIUM CHOCOLATE HOLDS STEADY IN TOUGH ECONOMY
More-Selective Consumers Make Each Morsel Count With Emphasis on Ingredient Sourcing and Artisan Production Even in a recession, frugal consumers shell out cash for popular premium chocolate, but the variety they purchase depends on its value, quality and manufacturer. Chicago-based market-research company, Mintel says trendy, pricier premium cocoa varieties promote chocolate consumption growth. Throngs of products from smaller specialty as well as major chocolate manufacturers line store shelves. But consumers are buying the sweets less often and more discriminatively as household incomes contract with the U.S. recession and world economic crisis. Premium chocolate is typically characterized by an emphasis on sourcing and the production process, much like wine. A premium price tag also tends to accompany the pursuit of quality. In volume terms, growth in the premium chocolate segment has slowed somewhat in recent months as a result of the global economic crisis. However, in value terms, this category is still growing, according to Switzerland-based Barry Callebaut. The company sells chocolate to industrial food manufacturers, artisans and chefs as well as international chocolate retailers and consumers. As of November, 2008, total chocolate candy sales in supermarkets, drugstores and mass merchandise outlets totaled $4.99 billion, a 2.2% increase from the year before, according to data compiled by Information Resources Inc., a Chicago-based research firm. That data excluded Wal-Mart Stores Inc. In the same period, however, average unit sales decreased by about 3.8% and average price per unit increased by nine cents, according to the data. Chocolate makers felt price pressure and many large manufacturers increased prices in 2008 amid multidecade highs in raw cocoa prices. Large chocolate manufacturers Barry Callebaut and Hershey Co. delved into the premium chocolate realm previously occupied primarily by smaller-scale specialty manufacturers. In 2008, Mars Inc.’s Mars Snackfood US introduced M&Ms Premiums in flavors such as mint chocolate and raspberry almond, as well as dark chocolate varieties. Consumer familiarity gives some brands an advantage over others amid the glut of premium chocolates on the market as new lines continue to be launched, Mintel said. Smaller specialty premium manufacturers may have a better chance at staying afloat during tough economic times because they have less competition than large manufacturers, according to Mintel. Two specialty companies are Askinosie Chocolate in Springfield, Mo., and Guittard Chocolate of Burlingame, Calif., which have their own approaches to making and selling chocolate. Askinosie Chocolate has a hands-on, personalized production method and business model, according to founder Shawn Askinosie. The company purchases approximately 20 tons of cocoa beans annually, just a fraction of a major manufacturer’s supplies, he says. The company is a member of Craft Chocolate Makers of America, a group of independent chocolate makers that stresses the importance of small batches and select ingredients to produce quality chocolate. Gary Guittard said his company saw more sales of its chocolate to candy manufacturers as discretionary spending received a nudge higher from easing gas prices. Guittard Chocolate is a
The Worlds of Flavor® International Conference & Festival, presented by The Culinary Institute of America (CIA), is widely acknowledged as our country’s most influential professional forum on world cuisines and culinary flavor trends. At the most recent conference, A Mediterranean Flavor Odyssey: Preserving And Re-Inventing Traditions For Modern Palates, Valley Fig Growers showcased an exceptional array of dried California figs and fig products including the newest member of the product family, Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
Sondra Bernstein and chef John Toulze, from the Girl & The Fig Restaurant, served their newest creation, a divine fig-infused martini, called Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. It was a huge hit with the chefs, food editors, and culinary dignitaries from around the world in attendance at the conference, as was their Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.. Valley Fig Growers was honored to also feature culinary expert and cookbook author, Marie Simmons. She served two of her favorite fig dishes, Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. and Error! Hyperlink reference not valid., both are featured recipes in her book, Fig Heaven.
FIGS SHINE AT THE CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA
Nestle has launched a new website to provide information and news about its global R&D. The site: http://www.nestle.com/NestleResearch/NestleResearchHome.htm brings together information and news from the company’s 24 research, technology and development centres. The most recent addition to the R&D network was the inauguration of a new research and development centre in Beijing to focus on health and wellness. The centre, which employs 80 people, will target three main categories, including growth and development, healthy ageing and weight management. Nestlé spent nearly $3 billion on research and development last year.
NESTLÉ LAUNCHES NEW RESEARCH WEB PORTAL
April 2009 • The Cracker 17September 2005 • the CraCker 65
Please visit our website athttp:www.satake-usa.com
email: [email protected]
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ARRANGEMENTS FOR A SAMPLE TO BE TESTED, PLEASE CONTACT:USA, Latin AmericaSatake USA Inc.10905 Cash RoadStafford, TX 77477Tel: 281-276-3600Fax: 281-494-1460
USA West Coast Satake USA Inc.3416 Oakdale RoadModesto, CA 95355Tel: 209-551-3203Fax: 209-551-0841
Europe, Africa, The Middle EastESM (UK) Ltd.P.O. Box 47, Horsfield Way Stockport, Cheshire SK6 2FN(England)Tel: (44) 161-406-3888 Fax: (44) 161-406-3889
AsiaSatake Corporation2-30 Saijo NishihonmachiHigashi-HiroshimaJapan 739-8602Tel: +81-824-20-8539Fax +81-824-20-0865
31_Satake 4/20/05 2:17 PM Page 1
18 The Cracker • April 2009
WWW.NUTFRUIT.ORGThe INC continues to expand its website at www.nutfruit.org with new services for our members, new statistical data in its database and updated resources and materials for the industry. As a result INC website statistics show over 60,000 visitors to the website last year, and over 3.5 million hits to date.
New! Spanish-language Section on WebsiteSince Spanish is the second most spoken language within the INC membership, we just launched the new Spanish-language website section which you can access through the general home page or directly go to the www.nutfruit.org/es, This new section has been designed to provide information about nuts and health, information about INC activities, the World Nut and Dried Fruit Congress and much more. We invite you to learn about different nut stories, creative recipes, consumer questionnaires and a site for documents with more than 125 scientific studies summarized in the Spanish language.
Google PageRankINC’s website has reached a PageRank of 5/10. PageRank is Google’s trademarked measurement of the quality and relevance of a website within the internet. Thanks to all INC links to other web sites, www.nutfruit.org has reached this excellent PageRank which puts INC in a privileged position for accessing a search engine. In addition to Google, the INC website has also been registered on several other internet search engines such as Yahoo, Abacho, AIM, Entireweb, ChangingLinks, Exactseek, True Search and many more.
The Cracker Now OnlineFrom January 2009, INC members and subscribers may read, download, store and print the magazine from the website at the Cracker section. This online version of The Cracker features all the articles, market reports and statistical data available in the print edition, along with a dropdown index to quickly access the contents, zoom tools and website links to our advertisers. From now on you can read The Cracker anywhere, anytime!
Nutrient Profiles of Nuts and Dried FruitsTake a quick and easy look at the nutrient composition of nuts and dried fruits: A convenient link has been added to the web site in order to make it easier for surfing. The chart “Nutrients in Nuts and Dried Fruits” shows values for the following nutrients: protein, carbohydrates, fat, minerals, vitamins and carotenoids found in nuts and dried fruits. It also breaks down the fats into saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats. The data is based on values from the latest published version of the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, the major source of food composition data in the United States.
Internet Quality StampThe INC website has successfully passed audit inspection by Online Trust, (OT), a non-profit official association formed by the Department of Industry and Commerce of the Government. This is part of the services offered by the Audiovisual Council which promotes and strengthens users’ confidence in websites through self-regulation and a quality stamp. OT monitors advertising regulation, electronic trade, infancy protection, accessibility, usability, reliability, privacy and data
protection. The association analyzes corresponding standards to defend citizens’ common interests and rights. The OT Trustmark logo has been inserted onto INC’s web pages providing proof of compliance with ethical principles and quality standards.
NEWS FROM THE INC SECRETARIAT
Google Maps and Google EarthThe INC has been recently registered in Google Maps and Google Earth, Google’s virtual globe, map and geographic information programs. Find the physical location of the INC headquarters using Google searches or to view maps and driving instructions.
INC now at Wikipedia!Wikipedia is an online encyclopedia created in 2001 that has become one of the most useful and biggest websites on the internet. The INC has been recently added to Wikipedia articles about almonds, Brazil nuts, cashews, hazelnuts, macadamias, pecans, pine nuts, pistachios, walnuts, peanuts, dates, prunes and raisins. The contents are full of links that help give users a deeper understanding of related issues and topics.
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TipsAre nuts fattening? You can now measure your knowledge about nuts and dried fruits through the short interactive question we just added to the home page. While thinking about the correct answer you can listen to the music of the Nutcracker Ballet.Enjoy your surfing!
April 2009 • The Cracker 19
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publication: The Cracker trim size: 11 3/4 x 8 1/4 ad with bleed
20 The Cracker • April 2009
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CALCAGNI TO CHAIR EU FRUIT/VEGETABLE ADVISORY GROUPPino Calcagni, Chairman of the Scientific and Government Affairs Committee and past President of the INC has been elected Chairman of the European Union Advisory Group on Fruit and Vegetables for the next two years. The Advisory Groups bring together high-level EU advisers to assist the European Commission in matters relating to agricultural policy and policy for rural development and implementation. The group represents businesses familiar with the marketplace that can advise about measures for which the Commission is called on to consider. Among others, the Advisory Group on Fruit and Vegetables considers the EU School Fruit Scheme, F&V Common Market Organization, F&V Marketing Standards, Maximum Residue Levels and international trade matters. This appointment is a significant recognition of Mr. Calcagni’s substantial contribution to the nut and dried fruit industry.
THE INC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETS IN NEW YORKThe INC Executive Committee met in March in New York to review the five-year financial and strategic plan for priority actions; the 2008 year-end financial report and the budget for 2009. The Committee also discussed project funding, and reviewed the performance of the sub-committees (Audit Committee, Membership and Ambassadors’ Committee, Editorial and Statistics Committee, Congress Committee and Scientific and Government Affairs Committee). The next meeting of the Executive Committee will be held in Monaco during the INC Annual Congress.
When diet changes, everything changes.Located in Avery Fisher Hall at the New York Lincoln Center, the Institute for Integrative Nutrition (INN) was founded in 1992 as a nutrition school. The program’s mission is to play a crucial role in improving health and happiness in America. Through that process, it creates a ripple effect that transforms the world.The INN boasts about being the only school in the world teaching more than 100 dietary theories, from traditional to modern, Eastern to Western, popular to esoteric. Some of the theories they cover include the Atkins diet, blood type diet, calorie restriction, high-carbohydrate diets, among others. Within dietary theories, we are pleased to see nuts included as a key diet component in most of their dietary theories.
The following conclusions and recommendations of this Discussion Paper were taken into consideration by the CCCF:
C
CODEX COMMITTEE ON CONTAMINANTS IN FOODSOnce again, the INC participated at the annual Session of the Codex Committee on Contaminants in Foods (CCCF), held on March 23-27, 2009, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Among others, the CCCF discussed the Codex General Standard for Contaminants and Toxins in Foods; Draft Maximum Levels for Total Aflatoxins in Brazil Nuts; Code of Practice for the Reduction of Acrylamide in Food; Code of Practice for the Reduction of Contamination of Food with Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH) from Smoking and Direct Drying Processes; and Priority List of Contaminants and Naturally Occurring Toxicants Proposed for Evaluation by JECFA. The INC, as Official Non-Government Observer, was represented by Mr. Pino Calcagni, Chairman of the INC Scientific and Government Affairs Committee, and Ms. Julie Adams, Vice-Chairman.
Discussion Paper on Aflatoxin Contamination in Brazil NutsThe INC has participated in the preparation of a Discussion Paper on Aflatoxin Contamination in Brazil Nuts with several other organizations. It was prepared by Brazil, with contributions from FAO, the Netherlands, UK, USA, the Confederation of the Food and Drink Industries of the EU (CIAA). While the paper covers production conditions and practices, it highlights the complexities of Brazil nut cultivation and its importance to the economic well-being of the Amazonian region. It also serves as the basis of discussions during the CCCF. Unfortunately, the final paper was not available until shortly before the meeting, which did not allow sufficient time for submission of comments by Codex member governments. During the plenary meeting, the Codex secretariat emphasized the importance of ensuring the document, and its subsequent recommendations, were thoroughly reviewed and discussed. It was then agreed to make several modifications to the paper based on preliminary discussions; the full document will be circulated to member countries and included in the agenda for the 2010 CCCF meeting.
THE CRACKER MAGAZINE IS NOW ONLINE! VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.nutfruit.org>
v The Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (JECFA) concluded that enforcing a maximum level of 15, 10, 8 or 4 µg/kg would have little further impact on the overall dietary exposure to total aflatoxin through the intake of almonds, Brazil nuts, hazelnuts and pistachios in the highest exposed population groups, compared with establishing a ML of
v Brazil nuts production has always been an important economic activity for the Amazonian people, supporting the preservation of tropical rain forest.
20 µg/kg. Furthermore, for almonds, Brazil nuts and hazelnuts the presence of a ML has no effect on dietary total aflatoxin exposure.
v The levels of aflatoxins in ready-to-eat Brazil nuts (shelled) to be exported from Brazil are usually very low. According to the results of the CONFORCAST1 project, 96% of the 500 sub-samples analyzed were in the range from 0 to 10 µg/kg.
v According to the CONFORCAST project, the levels of total aflatoxins in 54 sub-samples of no-sorted Brazil nuts in-shell ready to be exported (for further processing) were higher than 50 µg/kg in 3,7% of the lots. Such lots should be processed/ treated before arriving to the final consumer.
v When only good nuts were considered, 1,9% of them had levels between 15 and 50 µg/kg. Total aflatoxin levels found in in-shell good nuts were mostly below 5 µg/kg (90,4%).
v Good in-shell Brazil nuts can be separated from the rotten ones in the analytical sample by visual inspection at the laboratory. This procedure is routinely performed by the exporters when buying the nuts and when they want to export a lot as ready-to-eat.
v According to a study to evaluate consumers’ ability to discriminate aflatoxin contaminated in-shell Brazil nuts (Marklinder et al., 2005), consumers may visually separate the edible from the inedible contaminated nut during the shelling process and thus protect themselves from exposure to high levels of aflatoxins.
v The following maximum limits were recommended to be used in international trade for Brazil nuts: 15 µg/kg for shelled ready-to-eat Brazil nuts, 20 µg/kg shelled for further processing, 20 µg/kg in-shell ready-to-eat, 50 µg/kg in-shell for further processing.
1 The results of the CONFORCAST project “Analytical tools to guarantee Brazil nuts quality and safety” were released by the Brazilian Department of Agriculture during the Workshop “Sampling Plan for Brazil Nuts” held in Belém, Brazil, from 10th to 12th November 2008.
Photo: Institute for Intergrative Nutrition
22 The Cracker • April 2009
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The worldwide repercussions of a peanut product recall by a small U.S. peanut processor that faces severe economic challenges to its business and vigilant regulation by government agencies headlined the recent 101 annual meeting in late February of the American Council for Food Safety and Quality (ACFSQ). The meeting was held in conjunction with its sister organization the Specialty Crop Trade Council’s (SCTC) 84th annual meeting. The SCTC was formerly the California Dried Fruit Export Association. President and Chief Executive Officer, Merle Jacobs, warned dried fruit and tree nut industry members that government regulators will respond vigorously with increased inspections of an industry now portrayed as “high risk.” He also reminded ACFSQ members that they have a distinct advantage over non-members for the food safety services available to them. ACFSQ membership requires three unannounced food safety sanitation inspections per year. These are not like most third party audits which primarily audit food safety systems and documentation. “Our inspections are designed to specifically look for sanitation issues that regulators will investigate when they visit a plant,” emphasized Jacobs. “The ACFSQ holds the only private partnership agreement with the United States Food and Drug Administration which is designed to mirror the FDA inspections and provide them with a reasonable assurance that our members are ‘lower risk,’” added Jacobs.
The conference, which included annual membership meetings for both organizations as well as food safety and transportation workshops, was attended by approximately 200 of the dried fruit and tree nut industry’s growers, processors, marketers and shippers…virtually a Who’s Who of the industry. Attendees also visited with over two dozen exhibitors and industry sponsors. A summary of events follows:
FOOD SAFETY WORKSHOP
Margaret Burton, Senior Manager of Quality Program
Execution for Jack in the Box Restaurants recounted the E. coli O157:H7 outbreak that occurred in 1993 and its dramatic effect on their company and how it caused the USDA to change the way they evaluate beef safety. She discussed how Jack in the Box changed and developed extensive programs for food safety with multiple “hurdles” built in as redundant safeguards. She also featured how the lessons learned at Jack in the Box could be used by the dried fruit and tree nut industry to strengthen food safety programs. Based on its strong procurement, transportation and recall programs, the restaurant chain is able to perform a recall within two hours! They have also reduced beef suppliers from 15 to 3 to ensure a safe incoming product. Continuous discussions with suppliers and third party audits are conducted to ensure that food safety systems are a top priority.
PEANUT INDUSTRY CHALLENGES HEADLINE ACFSQ ANNUAL MEETING
Trade Council Plans for Fewer Available Ships
24 The Cracker • April 2009
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– Continued on page 22
Luis Solórzano, Director of Investigation in the
San Francisco District Office, US Food and Drug
Administration presented an overview of the FDA’s role in food safety, as well as major areas of concern for processors. Increased inspections and scrutiny of both domestically produced and imported products will take priority in the future. For example, the San Francisco District recently added 25 new investigators and 15 laboratory analysts. Mr. Solórzano also said that the FDA will emphasize “high risk foods” with a history of food safety incidents. CalFERT (California Food Emergency Response Team) is a new joint incident command system in California that will be implemented to respond quickly to food safety incidents.
Thomas Jones, Assistant Lab Director & Senior
Microbiologist, ACFSQ provided an overview of the recent salmonella outbreak in peanut butter highlighting the impact on an entire industry and how diligent good manufacturing practices (GMP’s) and laboratory testing procedures reduce the potential for serious and very costly outbreaks.
Randall Brooks, Food Safety Manager, ACFSQ detailed the Association’s Food Safety Inspection Program which provides three unannounced inspections per year. Differing from other third party audits, these inspections primarily serve as “system” audits. Designed as a program that would mirror that of regulatory agency reviews, fundamental observations are noted in a thorough audit of sanitation and Good Manufacturing Practices expected from compliant companies.
Erika Tarr, Sanitarian, ACFSQ reviewed the procedures for the ACFSQ’s Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) certification program and the prerequisite GMP programs. ACFSQ certifies HACCP plans which provides companies with an outside review by food safety experts. By having a certified HACCP plan, a processor’s customers are assured that the plan is robust and effective.
TRANSPORTATION WORKSHOP
Erika Tarr, Program Manager, SCTC facilitated a panel of experts about critical inter-modal transportation issues important to the dried fruit and tree nut industry: Peter Freidman Executive Director of the Agriculture
Transportation Coalition; Ernie Kuo, Vice President of
Sales and Marketing, Pacific International Lines (USA)
Inc.; Paul Snell, Vice President, Ocean Express; Jim Wilson, Assistant Sales Manager Import/Export Team,
Yang Ming (America) Corp. and Roland Kerby, Assistant
Vice President Marketing and Sales-West Coast, Zim
American Integrated Shipping Services Co., Inc.
Among the prominent issues is a new “clean truck” fee program that will force companies to purchase trucks and employ drivers versus traditionally using owner/operators for contractual work. Export shipping carriers also discussed industry changes that will translate into fewer vessels available in 2009 due to a downturn in world economics. Some vessels will simply no longer operate. Along with fewer U.S. imports expected near-term, shippers can expect containers to be “rolled” to available vessels during peak shipping periods. The good news is that panel members all agreed that the California dried fruit and tree nut industry will receive favorable rates in the near future. At an earlier business meeting, SCTC agreed to support the industry’s use of either the existing SCTC Export Contract (which is commonly used throughout the industry and incorrectly referred to as “DFA Terms and Conditions”) or the California Almond Export Association’s “Unified Almond Export Contract” (UAEC) for almond shipments. Although the majority of the contract provisions are similar, the UAEC is used for issues specific to almonds such as aflatoxin. It is also governed by English law and does not use SCTC for arbitration.
For more information, visit www.agfoodsafety.org. The ACFSQ is headquartered in Sacramento, California.
April 2009 • The Cracker 25
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As of March, illnesses were still being added to the exisiting 683 reported from a prominent recall
incident that covered nearly all 50 U.S. states and other countries. Estimated to cost the industry $1
billion, the problem was attributed to an outbreak of salmonella typhimurium infection as a result of
eating peanut butter crackers originating from a small company, the Peanut Corporation of America,
last December.
U.S. government regulators like the Food and Drug Administration emphasized that major brands of
jarred peanut butter found in grocery stores are not on the Peanut Corporation of America recall list.
Nevertheless, the damage had been done and the results were overwhelmingly affecting all companies
producing peanut butter products and consumers who misinterpreted the nightly news reports as they
decided to avoid all peanut products “just to be safe!”
According to the National Peanut Board (NPB), an intensive communications effort designed to
educate about the recall needed to be conducted immediately to restore confidence in consumers
about purchasing peanut butter products. While illnesses are still being reported (though the number
has declined) the NPB has launched a campaign designed to gain national multi-media publicity.
America’s Peanut Farmers Speak Out to Consumers
The NPB issued a letter that frames the recent recall and published recently in USA Today. It was
from the Chairman of the National Peanut Board(NPB) Roger Neitsch on behalf of America’s more
than 10,000 peanut farmers. In this letter, Neitsch addressed the salmonella crisis and emphasized
how farmers care about consumers’ safety.
“We are all deeply upset by the actions of one isolated company. We may be peanut farmers, but we
are also fathers, mothers, sons and daughters – and consumers – just like you. So we understand and
share your concerns.”
Food Safety and the U.S. Peanut Industry
The following policy statement is what the NPB issued at the onset of the national U.S. recall
to explain how responsible industry members ensure the quality and safety of their products: The
U.S. peanut industry adheres to the highest levels of food safety practices. In the case of peanut
butter, most manufacturers have adopted a food safety system that determines and eliminates food
safety risks (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point). This ensures that when peanuts arrive in the
processing plant, cross contamination is avoided by keeping the raw product completely separated
from the cooked product.
U.S. Peanut Industry Launches Communications Campaign to Combat Recall Anxiety
Chairman of the National Peanut Board (NPB) Roger Neitsch
26 The Cracker • April 2009
Additionally, raw peanuts are roasted prior to being processed into peanut butter. The roasting
temperature is high enough to kill salmonella bacteria. The American Peanut Council has also
adopted a Voluntary Code for Good Manufacturing Practices that includes recommended operating
procedures for peanut processors. The recommended procedures include regular sampling, testing,
and verification of negative microbiological contamination in
peanut manufacturing plants.
What is Salmonella?
Defining what salmonella is became vital to consumers’
understanding of the reason for the recall. It is important in
crisis situations like these that the situation causing the problem
is clearly understood. Here is how salmonella was described by
the NPB: The Salmonella bacteria can cause an infection known
as Salmonellosis, which often produces diarrhea, fever and
abdominal cramps 12 to 72 hours after infection. The illness
usually lasts 4 to 7 days, and most persons recover without
treatment. However, in some persons, the diarrhea may be so
severe that the patient needs to be hospitalized. In these patients,
the Salmonella infection may spread from the intestines to the
blood stream, and then to other body sites and can cause death
unless the person is treated promptly with antibiotics. Older
adults, infants and those with impaired immune systems are more likely to experience severe illness,
and should be seen by a physician if they experience these symptoms.
Contaminated foods are often of animal origin, such as beef, poultry, milk, or eggs, but any food,
including vegetables, may become contaminated. Thorough cooking kills Salmonella. Raw peanuts
are roasted prior to being processed into peanut butter. The roasting temperature is high enough to
kill salmonella bacteria.
Because consumers were confused about what products were part of the recall and were also
inclined to throw out all peanut products in their cupboards, a website was set up with immediate
updates about the recall, including a list of products involved. This helped to give consumers
confidence about the peanut products they already purchased or wanted to purchase. Consumers
were instructed to visit the Center for Disease Control (CDC) for more information about salmonella:
http://www.cdc.gov/salmonella/typhimurium/
Positive Reactions to NPB’s NYC Outreach Events
With support from many members of the industry, the National Peanut Board held several outreach
events in New York in March to answer consumer’s questions and speak to the media to correct
misinformation and emphasize the benefits of peanuts and peanut butter. The program drew tens
of thousands of people, and two special editions of News in a Nutshell, the industry’s newsletter,
highlighted the most notable parts of the event.
From shellers and manufacturers to NPB board members and other grower-volunteers and
consumers, everyone seemed to have something positive to say about the NYC outreach events.
Industry Donation Helps Those in Need, Corrects Recall Confusion
In addition to joining together for the New York City outreach events, the industry contributed to
the Food Bank of New York City during the two-day event in Grand Central Terminal.
The NPB donated $5,000 to the food bank to purchase peanut butter and other peanut products.
Other donators include Hampton Farms, Jif, Kind, Lance, Mars, Moon Pie, NY Apple Planters,
Sue Birdsong is one of many industry volunteers who handed out samples and promotional items at Grand Central Terminal.
NPB chairman Roger Neitsch and president and managing director Raffaela Marie Fenn announce donation to Food Bank For New York City.
North Carolina farmer and NPB alternate Dan Ward hands out Peanuts: Energy for the Good Life T-Shirts at Grand Central Terminal in New York City.
28 The Cracker • April 2009
April 2009 • The Cracker 29
BESANA_VISUAL_1 4-08-2008 14:30 Pagina 1
Colori compositi
C M Y CM MY CY CMY K
Peanut Butter & Company, Peter Pan, Smithfield Foods/The Peanut Shop of Williamsburg, Snyders of
Hanover and Sunland. In addition to supporting the community, the donation may help increase food
banks’ comfort with accepting donations of products that are unaffected by the recalls.
“Several food banks across the country threw out all of their jarred peanut butter when they first
heard the confusing messaging about peanut butter products,” said NPB President and Managing
Director Raffaela Marie Fenn. “This donation goes a long way in restoring confidence in peanut butter
and clearing up the confusion about jarred peanut butter.” According to the FDA, “Major national
brands of jarred peanut butter found in grocery stores have not been among the products recalled.”
While the outreach events at Grand Central Terminal were designed for consumers and general
press, the NPB hosted a special outreach event for the culinary press and industry representatives at
Astor Center in Greenwich Village. The event featured five renowned chefs, each specializing in a
unique world cuisine. The chefs created traditional dishes with a peanut-inspired twist from appetizers
to desserts.
Comments overheard from press attendees included, “It’s great that the National Peanut Board
is hosting this event especially during this time. It gives us an opportunity to ask questions, enjoy
some great food and see how versatile peanuts can be in the culinary sphere.” For most, it was hard
to pick a favorite dish of the night, but several people called the Sambal in the Style of Java, which
used peanuts, peanut butter and peanut oil, “the best soup ever.” After tasting the Magic Bar, another
attendee said, “peanuts are always a perfect combination.”
There has been extensive on-line social media, newspaper, magazine, and broadcast coverage,
including the Wall Street Journal, CNN Radio and dozens of TV and radio interviews coast-to-coast
for an audience to reach more than 40 million. It takes this kind of dedicated industry time and
investment to overcome a crisis situation like this one. C
Chef Suvir Saran, who presented at the event, is interviewed by a Wall Street Journal reporter as chef Ron Rando listens in.
30 The Cracker • April 2009
More than 93 percent U.S. consumers
have recently read or heard reports of food
safety issues and recalls and almost a fourth
of Americans said the recalls will change their
long term food buying behavior, according to
a new study of U.S. consumer attitudes about
food safety published by Burson-Marsteller and
Penn Schoen & Berland Associates. Burson-
Marsteller’s expertise in food communications
and product recalls spans decades: From the
Tylenol scare, to the first-ever detection of BSE
(mad cow disease) in the U.S., and melamine tainted pet food from China.
How these crises unfold through the
news, through social media networks,
and throughout the food marketing chain,
create new and potentially crippling
vulnerabilities for food companies. Federal
and state officials are now looking at
fundamental issues related to food safety in
radically different ways.
Through all of this change, consumer
expectations for quick and specific
information have never been higher. They
want as much information as possible
when a problem is discovered, they expect
to be told the facts immediately, and a majority of Americans think the food safety system is
broken.
Taken together, these challenges test food
companies and communicators at a greater
level than ever before. Only 15 percent of
Americans agree the food safety system in the
U.S. is well prepared to deal with any further
food contamination outbreaks. The charts on
this page and on page 34 are the results of
the food safety survey.
U.S. Food Safety Survey Says Recalls Affect Future Purchases
– Continued on page 34
Most US Consumers Still Believe Food Supply is Safe
High Awareness of Recent Food Safety Issues
Consumers Believe Food Contaminations are Increasing
32 The Cracker • April 2009
34 The Cracker • April 2009
– Continued from page 32
C
Some Consumers Will Take Longer Term Measures
Mothers Show Higher Levels of Concern
Consumers Hold Regualtors Responsible for Food Safety
Recall Prompts Short Term Food Purchase Adjustments
XXVIII WORLD NUT AND DRIED FRUIT CONGRESSMONACO, 29-31 MAY 2009
ear friends,
With barely a month to go, we are looking forward to welcoming you to the XXVIIIth World Nut and Dried Fruit Congress in Monaco, where we will have an exciting and informative programme of meetings and events, both social and business, to cater for all your needs (for more detailed information please con-sult the INC website and the literature which has been sent so far).
In Monaco itself, the weather is getting warmer, the days are getting longer and there is a palpable feeling of excitement in the air, as preparations commence for the Grand Prix, the traditional start of the summer season.
To date, registrations and hotel bookings for the Congress are at an all-time high, reflecting a huge vote of confidence in our industry, especially in these challenging and uncertain economic times.
Given the constantly changing patterns in global dried fruit and nut consump-tion, the Congress will, as always, be an excellent opportunity for all of us to analyse these patterns and, hopefully, derive a greater confidence in what the future holds for our industry.
As an added bonus to the business programme, we have organised some excit-ing “spouse tours”, which will include not only visits to the surrounding area, but also an in-depth and “behind the scenes” introduction to the famous Monte Carlo Casino. In addition, delegates will be well placed to visit the stunning French Riviera, from, to the West, the beaches of St. Tropez and La Croisette in Cannes (where the renowned Film Festival will be wrapping up), to the breath-taking Italian Riviera, to the East.
We very much look forward to seeing you all in May.
With best regards,
Adam HackingCongress Co-Chairman
International Nut and Dried Fruit Foundation
Giles HackingCongress Co-Chairman
D
April 2009 • The Cracker 37
38 The Cracker • April 2009
XXVII
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THURSDAY, 28 MAY 2009
9:00am Registration at the Fairmont Hotel. Until 5:00pm
FRIDAY, 29 MAY 2009
8:00am Bus departs from Fairmont Hotel for Golf Tournament at Monte Carlo Golf Club. Golf Tournament, Sponsored by Setton Pistachios Golf Lunch, Sponsored by Harris Woolf Almonds 9:00am Registration at the Fairmont Hotel. Until 5:00pm 9:00am Scientific and Government Affairs Committee Meeting, at the Fairmont Hotel. Until 2:30pm 9:30am Bus departs from Fairmont Hotel for Tennis Tournament at Monte Carlo Country Club10:00am Lessons in Casino Games at the Monte Carlo Casino3:00pm Dried Fruit Meeting. Until 5:00pm4:00pm Nut Nutrition Poker Tournament at Sun Casino, Fairmont Hotel. Until 6:30pm. Finals from 9.30pm till 2.00am 5:00pm Speakers’ Meeting at the Fairmont Hotel. Until 6:00pm6:45pm Bus departs from Monte Carlo Bay Hotel to “La Salle Empire”, Hotel de Paris 7:00pm Welcome Cocktail party at “La Salle Empire”, at Hotel de Paris. Until 9:00pm Co-Sponsored by Ahcom and the Monaco Tourist and Convention Authority
SATURDAY, 30 MAY 2009
9:00am Congress Officially opens at Fairmont Hotel Welcome: Giles Hacking & Adam Hacking, Congress Co- Chairmen, and Jack Mariani, INC Chairman 9:15am Welcome by the Secretary of State of Monaco, M. Jacques Boisson.9:30am HAZELNUTS Working Group, chaired by Dr. Maurizio Cortese, Ferrero Group 10:00am Speaker: Professor Joachim Schwass, IMD Family Business 10:45am Coffee break. Do not miss to visit the exhibitions area 11:15am WALNUTS Working Group, chaired by Gary Ford PECANS Working Group, chaired by Dick Walden11:45am DRIED: FIGS/ APRICOTS/ PRUNES Working Group, chaired by Mark Mariani 12:15pm BRAZIL NUTS Working Group, chaired by David Rosenblatt PINE NUTS Working Group, chaired by Huo Jianguo12:45pm Scientific Seminar “Round Table: Global Health, Safety in Food and Latest Regulatory Issues”, chaired by Giuseppe Calcagni INC Scientific and Government Affairs Committee Members Dr. Ezzeddine Boutrif, Director of the Nutrition and Protection Division FAO Dr. Daniel Scharlau, Friedrich-Schiller-University of Jena1:45pm Buffet Working Lunch, Sponsored by Rajkumar Impex Ltd 4:00pm Ambassadors Meeting, at the Fairmont Hotel. Until 6:00pm8:15pm Bus shuttle from Fairmont Hotel to “Le Deck” 8:30pm Casual Buffet Dinner at “Le Deck”
CONGRESS PROGRAM
SPEAKERSMonaco, 29-31 May 2009
Joachim Schwass is Professor of Family Business at IMD, Lau-sanne, Switzerland. He teaches
Family Business and Entrepreneurship and is Director of the Program “Leading the Family Business”. His main teaching focus is on owner related issues and, in parti-cular, from the next generation perspective. He has lec-tured and conducted Family Business programs around the globe. Prior to joining IMD, Professor Schwass was Managing Director of several companies which were part of his own family’s business. He was managing in-dustrial manufacturing businesses in Australia and USA as well as an international trading business in Switzer-land. Professor Schwass attended graduate studies at Technische Universität Berlin and Université de Fri-bourg where he obtained a Lic rer pol and a Dr rer pol. He has published many articles and the book “Wise Growth Strategies in Leading Family Businesses”. He di-rected the Annual Distinguished Family Business Award for 10 years. He was Executive Director of the Family Business Network for 10 years and currently serves on the Board.
Prof. Dr. Joachim SchwassProfessor of Family Business at IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland
In terms of points scored (535), David Coulthard is the most suc-cessful British Formula One dri-ver of all time. With 15 seasons in Formula One he has amassed 13 Grands Prix wins, 12 pole po-
sitions and 62 podium finishes, his last, a third place, coming at the 2008 Canadian GP. Over the 15 years that he was competing in motorsport’s premier event, Coulthard cemented his place among the most highly regarded drivers in Formula One history. His 246 race starts, make him the fourth most experienced racer of all time, with his points haul bettered only by Schuma-cher, Prost, Senna and Alonso. His 13 wins put Coulthard 18th in the all-time winners list. Coulthard has won the ‘classic’ Grands Prix in Monaco, Britain, Belgium and Italy, but he singles out his French GP victory in 2000 as his most satisfying, as it was a really hard-fought win from third on the grid. Since July 2008, he works with Red Bull Racing as consultant.
David CoulthardFormula One driver
WALKING DISTANCES FROM HOTELS TO THE EVENTS
April 2009 • The Cracker 39
XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress XXVIII World Nut & Dried Fruit Congress
Giuseppe Calcagni, Chairman of Besana Group, Italy, and past President of the INC, has been Chairman of the INC Scien-tific and Government Affairs Committee
since its creation. Mr. Calcagni’s entrepreneurial character has pus-hed him to the adventure of unceasing professional engagement and associative life, playing a main role in developing and imple-menting worlwide activities for the nut and dried fruit industry. He was appointed President of the Scientific Committee of FRUCOM, the European Federation of Trade in Dried Fruits, Edible Nuts et al., in 2003. He was President of FruitImprese, the Fruit and Vege-table Enterprises Association in Italy (former ANEIOA), from 1994 to 2003, and President of Freshfel Europe, the forum for the Euro-pean fresh fruits and vegetables chain, for the period 2006-2008. He has recently been elected Chairman of the EU Advisory Group on Fruit and Vegetables, which brings together high-level EU advi-sers to assist the European Commission in any matter relating to the common agricultural policy.
Giuseppe CalcagniPast President of the INC. Chairman of the INC Scientific and Government Affairs Committee
Dr. Ezzeddine Boutrif is Director of the Nutrition and Consumer Protection Division of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Dr. Boutrif is responsible for the
Organization’s program related to nutrition, food safety and consumer protection. The Division hosts the Secretariat of the FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission, the main inter-governmental body that develops international food standards, guidelines and recommendations with the double purpose of protecting consumer’s health and ensuring fair practices in the food trade. Dr. Boutrif has been involved in the development of many projects related to food safety and quality, including the review and analysis of national food control systems, formula-tion and execution of capacity building activities and develop-ment of manuals and training materials.
Dr. Ezzeddine BoutrifDirector of the Nutrition and Consu-mer Protection Division of the FAO
SCIENTIFIC SEMINAR
Dr. Daniel Scharlau was born in Dierdorf, Germany in January 1975. He attended biology studies in Ruhr-Universität Bo-chum, Germany. His master’s thesis at Ruhr-Universität was entitled “The role
of protein-protein interactions in the regulation of plastid”. He was a PhD student at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology, from 2002 to 2004, and he studied at the International Max Planck Research School in Chemical Biology. He obtained the degree of a Dr rer nat with the thesis “Dynamics of the Sodium-D-Glucose Co-Transporter SGLT1 in Mammalian Cell Lines” in 2004. And he was a postdoc at Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology, in 2005. Since December 2005, he is a postdoc at the Department of Nu-tritional Toxicology, Friedrich-Schiller-University, Jena, Germany.
Dr. Daniel ScharlauPostdoc at the Friedrich-Schiller-Univer-sity, Jena, Germany.
SUNDAY, 31 MAY 2009
9:00am INC General Assembly at the Fairmont Hotel: 1. Call to order and acceptance of the agenda by the Chairman 2. Report of the Advisory Committee by past Presidents/Chairmen 3. Report of the activities of the INC Foundation by the Executive Director 4. Financial status report of the Council by the Treasurer 5. Approval of the 2008 accounts of the Council 6. Approval of the 2009 Budget of the Council 7. Dismissal, appointment or re-election of members of the Board of Directors 8. Endorsement of Ambassadors proposed by the Board of Directors 9. Report of the INC Ambassadors 10. Announcement of the 2011 Congress site 11. Other Business10:00am 2010 Beijing-China, XXIX World Nut and Dried Fruit Congress Presentation by Huo Jianguo10:15am ALMONDS Working Group, chaired by Doug Youngdahl10:45am Coffee Break. Exhibition continues11:15am PISTACHIOS Working Group, chaired by Asadollah Asgaroladi PEANUTS Working Group, chaired by Chris Nubern 11:45am Speaker: David Coulthard, F1 Race Driver12:30pm CASHEWS Working Group, chaired by Ashok Krishen MACADAMIAS Working Group, chaired by Michael Waring1:00pm DRIED: DATES Working Group, chaired by Mohsen Boujbel DRIED: RAISINS/ SULTANAS/ CURRANTS Working Group, chaired by Barry Kriebel1:30pm Buffet Working Lunch, Sponsored by Sun-Maid Growers of California 6:45pm Bus shuttle from Fairmont Hotel to “Salle des Etoiles” 7:00pm Cocktail in the gardens of the Salle des Etoiles and des Salle des Palmiers 8:00pm Gala Dinner and Ball at the “Salle des Etoiles”. Sponsored by Noberasco S.P.A. Black tie/Lounge suit recommended
SPOUSES TOUR
SATURDAY
9:45am Spouses Tour: Monaco old town (lunch included). Until 2:30pm
SUNDAY
9:30am Spouses Tour: Nice, the Capital of the French Riviera (lunch included). Until 3:00pm
SPOUSE TOURS, GOLF & TENNISX X V I I I W O R L D N U T & D R I E D F R U I T C O N G R E S S
SPOUSE TOURS
GOLF TOURNAMENT TENNIS TOURNAMENTFRIDAY, 29 MAY 2009 Golf Tournament at Monte-Carlo Golf Club
At 900 metres altitude, a veritable golfers paradise awaits you with 18 unique and contrasting holes between the sky and the sea with views stretching to the French and Italian Rivieras, satisfaction guaranteed.
FRIDAY, 29 MAY 2009 Tennis Tournament at Monte-Carlo Country Club
The ochre of the courts and the blue of the sea. A breathtaking location dedicated to performance where each year the great champions come to compete for the Tennis Masters Series of Monte Carlo. 21 clay courts opening onto the sea, 2 in decoturf, 5 floodlit courts, 1 squash court and a pool.
SATURDAY, 30 MAY 2009 - MONACO
Leaving the hotel by luxury coach we will discover the history and pageantry of this tiny Principality across the centuries.
One week earlier the world will have watched the most spectacular of all the Grand Prix races as the fastest cars on earth roar through the elegant streets and our route will take us over part of this extraordinary circuit.
Arriving in the picturesque old town of Monaco we will continue with a walking tour to admire the narrow Monégasque streets of immaculate white, cream and pink buildings and abundance of flowers, plants and gardens. Time to visit the Cathedral and find some typical souvenirs.
From the old town we will drive to Casino Square, where you will be able to admire Garnier’s masterpiece, the famous Monte-Carlo Casino and the sumptuous gardens before we sit down for lunch at the Café de Paris.
This bustling brasserie style restaurant on Casino Square in the heart of Monte Carlo is one of the most famous restaurants in the world. Brasserie and traditional French cuisine is served.
SUNDAY, 31 MAY 2009 - NICE
Leaving Monaco by coach it is an approx 45 minute drive to Nice, the Capital of the French Riviera.
Surrounded by the foothills of the Alps and situated on the sweeping ‘Baie des Anges’, this famous Mediterranean resort has a long and fascinating history. The great nobles of Europe in the late 1800’s and the early 1900’s created the fashion to winter in the South of France.
Enjoy a stroll through the bustling vegetable and flower market on Cours Saleya and wander through the narrow streets of the old town with its typical ‘Nicois’ cafés and bistros. Time to sample or buy the local wines, olives and olive oil, lavender, the typical ‘Socca’ pancakes and the delicious crystallised fruits.
The lunch will be in the traditional and informal restaurant ‘Chez Simon’. Located in the hills above Nice (15 min coach drive from Nice centre), this family run restaurant serves typical Niçois specialities.
40 The Cracker • April 2009
EVENING PROGRAM 2009X X V I I I W O R L D N U T & D R I E D F R U I T C O N G R E S S
The Welcome Cocktail Party will be held at “La Salle Empire,” a tremendous historically elegant banqueting venue. Situated inside the Hotel de Paris in Casino Square and within walking distance of the Fairmont Hotel, it is emblematic of authentic European lifestyle.
Friday, 29 May 2009 LA SALLE EMPIRE
Saturday, 30 May 2009 LE DECKOur casual buffet dinner will take place at “Le Deck”, whose terrace features a sumptuous Olympic-style pool, overlooking the Mediterranean. The venue is a five-minute bus ride from the Fairmont Hotel.
Sunday, 31 May 2009 SALLES DES ETOILESThe traditional Gala Dinner and Ball will be held at the “Salles des Etoiles”, which has welcomed renowned international performers to its legendary stage. Dedicated to parties, shows and spectacular events, it is the ultimate symbol of Monaco’s dazzling art of living.
POKER FRIDAY, 29 MAY 2009
Do you want to perfect the art of winning?• Learneffectivestrategies• Knowbasicgamerules• Avoidcommonmistakes* Places are limited. First come, first served
Don’t miss the chance to enjoy gambling with your friends. The Nut Nutrition Poker tournament will be held at the prestigious Sun Casino on May 29th starting at 4pm with a break during the INC Cocktail party, to continue afterwards at 9.30pm.* Places are limited. First come, first served
FOR INSCRIPTIONS PLEASE CONTACT US AT [email protected]
10.00 AM LESSONS IN CASINO GAMES AT GRAND CASINO (CASINO SQUARE)
4.00 PM NUT NUTRITION POKER TOURNAMENT AT SUN CASINO (FAIRMONT HOTEL)FINALS FROM 9.30 PM TILL 2.00 AM
April 2009 • The Cracker 41
– Continued on page 24
In a recent presentation to California agricultural leaders, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Bruce Scherr of Informa Economics, Inc. said that U.S. agricultural commodities, along with non-agriculture commodities have achieved and will sustain, real economic value. He premised his remarks on global growth, globalized markets, limited political intervention and food and fuel agricultural strategy. However, he said that the risks of institutional failure, pandemics, wars, policy interference and global economic collapse could threaten the success levels of such growth. He also observed that limited land for some commodities and selective investment in productivity enhancements could affect future profitability for some.
The charts on page 44 are illustrations of Mr. Scherr’s premise about the future of agricultural products in a global marketplace. They illustrate how economic indicators have affected commodity markets and which ones will grow in the future based on distribution of population growth. They serve as a backdrop to the current world economic downturn and the potential for future investment as well as the impact on the now volatile ocean freight market. The implications are that business managers will need to carefully consider prices and profitability and how margins are affected. Stagflation could also affect margins. Given the globalization of marketplace, infrastructure investments also deserve careful contemplation according to the economist.
GLOBAL TRADE IS KEY TO FUTURE GROWTH
– Continued on page 44
42 The Cracker • April 2009
44 The Cracker • April 2009
C
– Continued from page 42
Monthly Average Reuters - CRB Futures IndexJanuary 1970 - January 2009
Daily Average Time Charter Rates
Trigger Levels of Gross National Income Per Capita for Different Types of Foods and the
Potential Impact of China’s Emerging Middle Class on Consumption
Real Interest RateSelect World Macroeconomic Indicators
$ / EURO
April 2009 • The Cracker 45
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46 The Cracker • April 2009
As an INC member, you have immediate international access to recognized leaders in the industry who volunteer their time and expertise at no expense to INC on matters which benefit the entire industry.
INC Ambassadors
INTERNATIONAL NUT AND DRIED FRUIT COUNCIL FOUNDATION
Oscar Vergara, argentina
art BeaVis, australia
Michael Waring, australia
Frank VaereWijck, BelgiuM
jaMes Beeny, Brazil
stephen Meltzer, canada
siegFried VOn gehr, chile
chen ying, china
saiFuddin aBidali, egypt
huBert BerreBi, France
dieter scheuer, gerMany
jOhn cardassilaris, greece
cheng hung kay, hOng kOng
pratap nair, india
asadOllah asgarOladi, iran
MOhsen jalalpOur, iran
Mehrdad ManOuchehri, iran
reMy BerreBi, israel
riccardO calcagni, italy
kazuO julian tagaWa, japan
pius M. ngugi, kenya
sarkis hasserjian, leBanOn
aBBas raFii, luxeMBOurg
kariM azzaOui, MOrOccO
kees Van de sandt, netherlands
erik harleM, nOrWay
jOrge carqueja, pOrtugal
kOurOsh MOjiBian, russia
ruslan sOkht, russia
philip lee, sOuth aFrica
antOniO pOnt, jr., spain
carOline lindeBerg, sWeden
MOhsen BOujBel, tunisia
saBit saBir, turkey
jaFar MOalleM, u.a.e.
niel hyde, u.k.
thOMas Finn, u.s.a.
Mark Mariani, u.s.a.
dick Walden, u.s.a.
jaMes Warner, u.s.a.
TIANJIN NATIVE PRODUCEIMP.&EXP. GROUP CORP., LTD.
PROCESSORDISTRIBUTOR
Chinese dried nuts and fruitsTEL: +86 22 28350592FAX: +86 22 28350401Email: [email protected], YOUYI ROAD, HEXI DISTRICTTIANJIN, CHINA 300201
April 2009 • The Cracker 47
Kenkko House. 8 Heriot Road. London NW4 2DG. England. Fax. +44 (0) 208 202 5500
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Building your business with a rock solid partner
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www.kenkko.comcall: +44 (0) 208 202 6600enquiries: [email protected]
CASHEWSIndiaBrazil
VietnamMozambique
NigeriaIndonesiaTanzania
Côte d’IvoireGuinea-Bissau
Kenya
HAZELNUTSTurkeyItalyUSASpain
AzerbaijanGeorgiaFranceChinaIran
Russia
MACADAMIASAustralia
USASouth Africa
MalawiBrazil
GuatemalaCosta Rica
KenyaZimbabwe
PECANSUSA
MexicoSouth Africa
Australia
PINE NUTSChinaRussia
AfghanistanPakistanMongolia
SpainPortugal
ItalyDPRKTurkey
PISTACHIOSIranUSASyriaTurkeyGreece
AfghanistanItaly
China
WALNUTSChinaUSAIran
TurkeyUkraine
ItalyChile
FranceIndia
RomaniaMoldova Greece
PEANUTSChinaIndia
NigeriaUSA
IndonesiaArgentinaVietnam
DATES Egypt
Saudi ArabiaIranIraq
TunisiaUSAIsrael
AlgeriaUnited Arab
EmiratesPakistanMorocco
DRIED APRICOTSTurkey
AustraliaIranUSA
South AfricaChina
DRIED FIGSTurkeyEgyptIran
GreeceItalyUSASpain
PRUNESUSAChile
FranceArgentina
SerbiaAustralia
South AfricaItaly
RAISINS/SULTANAS/CURRANTSTurkeyUSAIran
GreeceChile
UzbekistanSouth Africa
AustraliaArgentina
China
WORLD CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION TRENDS
«Statistics are also available at our website www.nutfruit.org»
MaIN PRoDUCING CoUNTRIeS
Listed by global production as per FAO but not necessarily meaning quantities going through commercial channels.
ALMONDSUSASpainSyriaItalyIran
AustraliaChile
MoroccoTunisiaGreeceTurkey
(AL)
(WA)
BRAZIL NUTSBoliviaBrazilPeru
(BR)
(PEA)
(CA)
(DAT)
(HA)
(DA)
(MA)
(DF)
(PE)
(PR)
(PIN)
(RA)
(PI)
Map shows 5 top producing countries. Other major producers listed below.
HAPIDA
PRWAAL RA
PEA PE
HA
PR
AL
PEA
MA
MAPE
CA
DAT
DATDF
DF
DF RA AL
ALHA
DAT
DAT
DAPIRA
WA
WA
PIN
PIN
PIN
PEA
PE
PEA
CA
MA
CA
DA
PI
PE
BR
BR
PRPR
BRCA
A P R I L 2 0 0 9 | G L O B A L S TAT I S T I C A L R E V I E W
HA PIWA DA
DFRA
AL
CA
HA
MA
PIN
PI
WA
PEA
DAT
DA
DF PR
RA
MA
April 2009 • The Cracker 49
50 The Cracker • April 2009
Source: ABC.
California Almond Exports by Region 2008/2009 Mid-Year
USA
According to the January 2009 Position Report published by the Almond Board of California, al-mond export shipments during the first six months of the crop year (August 2008-January 2009) kept even pace with the same period of the prior year, growing 1% to reach 226.000 MT (498 million
pounds). 46% of export shipments were destined for Western Europe, 31% to Asia, and 12% to the Middle East. The top five markets were Spain, India, China, Germany and the United Arab Emirates.
US shipments represented 28% of total shipments for the first half of the 2008/09 crop year as compared to crop year 2007/08. US shipments were
down 3,7% compared to the same period last year (the largest shipping year), but up 3,5% com-pared to crop year 2006/07 (the second largest shipping year).
SPAIN
As this report was written sales were slow, but despite the general economic turmoil demand was
enough to absorb the low volume on offer. The Spanish crop (nearly 32.000 MT) continues to enjoy a premium price for quality varieties.
Many areas had started blooming by mid February 2009. Weather conditions in winter had been very good, with cold temperatures and good rains in most regions.
ALMONDALMENDRAAMANDEMANDORLEMANDELBADEMAMETLLA
Estimated World Almonds Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
(*) Based on 3% inedible and process loss for both 2007 and 2008 crops.Source: ABC, ABA and other INC sources.
WORLD TOTAL 65.881 795.458 850.006 105.081 105.081 843.955 928.624 147.973
2007 / 2008 2008 / 2009
BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
USA MM lbs (*)
USA (*)
Spain
Australia
Greece
Italy
Tunisia
Iran
Turkey
Chile
Morocco
Syria
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
134 1.383 1.492 231 231 1.500 1.686 326
60.781 627.318 676.766 104.781 104.781 680.395 764.764 147.873
5.000 30.000 35.000 0 0 32.000 32.000 0
0 26.555 26.555 0 0 26.060 26.060 0
0 12.000 12.000 0 0 12.000 12.000 0
0 14.969 14.969 0 0 10.500 10.500 0
0 10.000 10.000 0 0 10.000 10.000 0
0 9.979 9.979 0 0 10.000 10.000 0
0 9.500 9.500 0 0 9.500 9.500 0
100 10.200 10.300 300 300 8.500 8.800 100
0 8.000 8.000 0 0 8.000 8.000 0
0 7.000 7.000 0 0 7.000 7.000 0
0 29.937 29.937 0 0 30.000 30.000 0
744.925 780.651
COUNTRY
Western Europe46 %
Asia31,4 %
Middle East11,8 %
Canada/Mexico4,5 %
Eastern Europe3,5 %
Other2,7 %
Top 10 Export Markets for California Almonds 2008/2009 Mid-Year. Metric Tons
40.000
30.000
20.000
10.000
0
Top ten export markets represent 74% of total exports shipments.
Spain India
China/Hong K
ongGermany UAE
Japan Italy Cana
da UKNether
lands
35.044
27.04025.377
25.111
13.23610.737
8.6648.558
7.4427.045
Source: ABC.
April 2009 • The Cracker 51
Estimated World Brazil Nuts Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
TOTAL 3.000 30.900 33.900 2.000 2.000 23.500 25.500 400
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
Bolivia
Brazil
Peru
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
1.000 21.000 22.000 1.200 1.200 16.000 17.200 0
2.000 7.000 9.000 800 800 5.000 5.800 300
0 2.900 2.900 0 0 2.500 2.500 100
31.900 25.100
COUNTRY
AMAZONIA (BRAZIL) NUTCOQUITO DE BRAZIL
NOIX DE VRESILNOCE DEL BRASILE
PARANÜSSEBREZILYA FINDIGI
NOU DE BRASIL
Bolivian exports in 2008 fell 13% to 18.133 MT (she-lled), posting their biggest drop
in the last 10 years, according to the National Institute of Statistics of Bolivia. The top
five export markets by rank were the United Kingdom, USA, The Netherlands, Australia
and Germany. Top 10 export markets represent 93% of total exports.
25.000
20.000
15.000
10.000
5.000
0
Bolivian Shelled Brazil Nuts Exports. Metric Tons
Source: National Institute of Statistics of Bolivia.
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
11.236 11.420 13.957 14.577 14.503 16.949 15.388 17.190 19.354 20.774 18.113
7.000
6.000
5.000
4.000
3.000
2.000
1.000
0
Top 10 Export Markets for Bolivian Brazil Nuts 2008. Metric Tons
Source: National Institute of Statistics of Bolivia.
6.260
4.613
1.224 1.060 972
7131.261
426493498593
UK USA Netherlands Australia Germany Italy Russian Fed. Spain Colombia Belgium-Luxemburg
Others
Estimated World Brazil Nuts Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
Source: INC.
TOTAL
2007/2008 2008/2009
Bolivia
Brazil
Peru
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) 58.300 46.800
COUNTRY
0 59.000 59.000 700 700 47.000 47.700 900
0 24.000 24.000 200 200 20.000 20.200 0
0 29.000 29.000 500 500 22.000 22.500 900
0 6.000 6.000 0 0 5.000 5.000 0
BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
52 The Cracker • April 2009
2008 was a year of ups and downs. The Indian sector saw cashew prices soar to all time high levels, reaching a record peak during the third quarter. Many contracts were cancelled or delayed. Buyers were forced to buy their requirements in the spot market, which pushed up the kernel market (kernel prices went up by 40-45%). Sales reached historically high levels in July-August. High prices together with
the global economic crisis affected con-sumer spending. Slow demand started pushing down the prices by August. By February 2009 buyers were covering their immediate requirements, and the market was expected to remain quiet for a while.
According to the African Cashew Alliance, the 2008/09 crop in Western Africa totaled 620.000 MT (raw nut).
As this report was written, the
new crop in Vietnam looked normal although it was too early to give a forecast.
The 2008/09 Brazilian crop was normal with about 300.000 MT (in shell), and the factories have been able to meet their pur-chasing targets despite occasional financing difficulties. The market recovered a little in January 2009, after falling constantly from the
extremely high prices seen in June-July 2008.
Brazilian exports in 2008 totaled 35.400 MT (kernel basis), down 31% from 2007, as result of the very poor 2007/2008 crop. Factories started processing the new crop slowly from September 2008 onwards, but exports did not reach normal levels as the economic slowdown was causing lots of buyers to reduce and delay orders.
CASHEWANACARDONOIX DE CAJOUANACARDIOCASHEW CEVIZIANACARD
64.696 148.683 213.379 35.360 35.360 232.126 267.486 61.525
2006 2007 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK
64.696 93.577 158.273 34.150 34.150 158.376 192.526 60.980
0 46.650 46.650 0 0 68.000 68.000 0
0 3.500 3.500 0 0 4.050 4.050 0
0 4.956 4.956 1.210 1.210* 1.700 2.910 545
178.019 205.961
Estimated World Cashews Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 0 488.530 488.530 0 0 538.400 538.400 0
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
India
West Africa (*)
Vietnam
Brazil
East Africa (**)
Indonesia
Cambodia
Philippines
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
0 160.000 160.000 0 0 176.000 176.000 0
0 109.500 109.500 0 0 133.300 133.300 0
0 83.330 83.330 0 0 75.000 75.000 0
0 44.100 44.100 0 0 62.500 62.500 0
0 40.500 40.500 0 0 40.500 40.500 0
0 29.500 29.500 0 0 29.500 29.500 0
0 12.000 12.000 0 0 12.000 12.000 0
0 1.700 1.700 0 0 1.700 1.700 0
0 1.400 1.400 0 0 1.400 1.400 0
0 1.100 1.100 0 0 1.100 1.100 0
0 5.400 5.400 0 0 5.400 5.400 0
488.530
COUNTRY
538.400
(*): Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, Benin, Senegal, Ghana and Burkina Faso. (**): Tanzania, Mozambique and Kenya.Source: Cashew Export Promotion Council of India, African Cashew Alliance, Sindicaju Brazil, and other INC sources.
Raw cashew nut - cashew kernel conversion rate: 4,8 kg RCN = 1 kg kernel (Brazil); 4,2 kg RCN = 1 kg kernel (all other countries)
Source: Cashew Export Promotion Council of India.
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
121.574 118.805 117.325 115.265 110.949 542,59 603,82 541 547 667 567.532 565.645 571.474 592.896 648.789 449,30 451 398 382 632
48,00% 40,60% 39,64% 36,70% 37,50% 12,00% 14,31% 16,25% 11,99% 13,00% 5,30% 5,41% 4,20% 3,49% 3,50% 6,20% 5,90% 7,76% 10,90% 9,25% 5,50% 4,89% 3,60% 4,61% 4,75%
Exports (kernels)Quantity (MT)Value (US$ In Millions)Imports (rawnuts)Quantity (MT)Value (US$ in Millions)Major Destinations Kernel ExportsUSANetherlandsUKUAEJapan
Indian Data
37.997 24.100 -36,6% 7.166 6.100 -14,9% 1.444 900 -37,7% 1.650 1.400 -15,1% 1.753 1.700 -3,0% 1.547 1.200 -22,4%
2007 2008 % Gain/Loss
51.556 35.400 -31,3%
North AmericaEURussiaMiddle EastLatin AmericaOthers
COUNTRY
TOTAL
Brazilian Exports. Kernels. Metric Tons
Source: Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade of Brazil.
Estimated East Africa Crops 2009/10 Metric Tons
Converted to kernel at 4.2 kg of RCN to make 1kg of kernel.
11.000 2.619 100.000 23.809 90.000 21.429 201.000 47.857
KenyaTanzaniaMozambiqueTOTAL
RCN KernelCOUNTRY
Source: INC.
April 2009 • The Cracker 53
TURKEY
As of February 25th 2009, the Turkish Grain Board (TMO) had 620.000 MT of hazelnuts in-shell in stock, of which 359.000 MT belon-ged to the 2008 crop and 270.000 MT belonged to old crops. TMO had bought 325.000 MT in shell from 2005, 2006 and 2007 crops, and 365.000 MT in shell from the 2008 crop. By end February 2009, TMO had sold 61.000 MT (6.400 MT from the 2008 crop and 44.000 MT from old crops). A total of 50.400 MT would be consumed as edible nuts, and 11.000 MT in shell would be crushed for oil.
Prices in Turkey fluctuated up
and down according to the rules of supply and demand, and the Dollar/Turkish Lira rate. 11-13mm kernels varied between USD 375 to 500 USD/100 kilos, fob/fot, and 13-15mm being scarce, about USD 30/60 higher. Small size under 11,00 mm had been unusually cheaper, due to unusually high ratio of small kernels in 2008 crop.
Exports from 1st September 2008 to 28th February 2009 reached 160.528 MT (kernel basis), up 23% from the same period of the previous season, which totaled 130.370 MT, and down 2% from the same period in 2006/2007.
By end February, the 2009 crop was already blossoming, with a
forecast of 600.000 MT (in shell).
ITALY
According to EuroStat, Italy exported 14.402 MT of hazelnuts between January and October 2008, down 8,3% from the same period of 2007, when exports reached 15.715 MT. The top three export markets by rank were Germany, Switzerland and France, with shares of 36%, 16% and 11% respectively.
USA
The Oregon field office of USDA National Agricultural Sta-tistics Service (NASS) estimated
the US 2008 crop at 30.800 MT, down 8% from the previous year due to adverse weather during the summer and cyclical production swings. Exports remained un-changed from the previous year at 33.400 MT, mainly going to China and the EU. SPAIN
SPAIN
A good quality crop in 2008 has allowed some industries to use more local production than previous years, providing liquidity to the market. Prices have been fluctuating according to the Turkish reference.
64.696 148.683 213.379 35.360 35.360 232.126 267.486 61.525
2006 2007 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK
64.696 93.577 158.273 34.150 34.150 158.376 192.526 60.980
0 46.650 46.650 0 0 68.000 68.000 0
0 3.500 3.500 0 0 4.050 4.050 0
0 4.956 4.956 1.210 1.210* 1.700 2.910 545
178.019 205.961
Estimated World Hazelnuts Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 156.114 369.550 525.664 181.168 181.168 570.679 751.847 335.018
2007 2008 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
TurkeyItalyGeorgiaAzerbaijanUSASpainFranceRussiaCroatiaOthers
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
150.000 275.000 425.000 172.500 172.500 450.000 622.500 317.500 (*) 5.000 44.000 49.000 8.000 8.000 63.529 71.529 14.000 0 10.000 10.000 0 0 14.000 14.000 1.200 0 12.300 12.300 0 0 12.400 12.400 1.200 1.114 13.400 14.514 218 218 12.300 12.518 218 0 8.100 8.100 450 450 11.700 12.150 900 0 1.935 1.935 0 0 2.025 2.025 n/a 0 400 400 0 0 400 400 0 0 276 276 0 0 276 276 0 0 4.139 4.139 0 0 4.049 4.049 0
344.496
COUNTRY
416.829
(*): 620.000 MT (in shell) at TMO.Source: Istanbul Hazelnut and Products Exports Union, Oregon Hazelnut Marketing Board and other INC sources.
Estimated World Hazelnuts Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 313.285 767.370 1.080.655 363.544 363.544 1.172.800 1.536.344 673.544
2007 2008 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
TurkeyItalyGeorgia AzerbaijanUSASpainFranceRussiaCroatiaOthers
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
300.000 550.000 850.000 345.000 345.000 900.000 1.245.000 635.000 (*) 10.500 95.000 105.500 17.000 17.000 135.000 152.000 30.000 0 25.000 25.000 0 0 35.000 35.000 3.000 0 30.800 30.800 0 0 31.000 31.000 3.000 2.785 33.570 36.355 544 544 30.800 31.344 544 0 18.000 18.000 1.000 1.000 26.000 27.000 2.000 0 4.300 4.300 0 0 4.500 4.500 n/a 0 800 800 0 0 800 800 0 0 600 600 0 0 600 600 0 0 9.300 9.300 0 0 9.100 9.100 0
717.111
COUNTRY
862.800
HAZELNUTAVELLANANOISETTENOCCIOLAHAZELNUB
FINDIKAVELLANA
54 The Cracker • April 2009
MACADAMIAMACADAMIAMACADAMIANUbMAKEDEMIA CEVIZIMACADÀMIA
Source: AMS, SAMAC, HDOA and other INC sources.
The Australian Macadamia Society has estimated a 2009 crop of 13.500 MT (kernel), up 29% from last year. Australia has experienced strong demand over the last months (Sept 2008 - Feb 2009). Prices in the USA have been reported to be in the region of US$ 2.75- $3.00/lb for style 4 halves and prices for whole kernel around US$ 5.00/lb.
According to the Hawaii Department of Agriculture, the 2009 crop is expected at 22.000 MT (in-shell), about 5.500 MT of kernel, up 18% from 2008. By mid February 2009, the US market was very flat and demand was slow as buyers were most concerned with the economic downturn and were not commit-ting forward.
Estimated World Macadamias Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
Estimated World Macadamias Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL
WORLD TOTAL
3.120 27.023 30.143 1.500 1.500 23.420 24.370 not available
not applicable 106.475 106.475 not applicable not applicable 92.200 92.200 not applicable
2008
2008
2009
2009
BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
Australia
South Africa
USA
Kenya
Malawi
Guatemala
Brazil
Costa Rica
Zimbabwe
Others
Australia
South Africa
USA
Kenya
Malawi
Guatemala
Brazil
Costa Rica
Zimbabwe
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
2.200 10.500 12.700 850 850 13.500 14.350 not available
250 5.600 5.850 550 550 not available not available not available
300 4.650 4.950 0 0 5.500 5.500 not available
300 2.000 2.300 100 100 2.330 2.430 not available
0 1.523 1.523 0 0 not available not available not available
20 1.250 1.270 0 0 1.440 1.440 not available
50 750 800 0 0 not available not available not available
0 200 200 0 0 200 200 not available
0 100 100 0 0 not available not available not available
0 450 450 0 0 450 450 not available
not applicable 35.000 35.000 not applicable not applicable 46.500 46.500 not applicable
not applicable 21.500 21.500 not applicable not applicable not available not available not applicable
not applicable 18.600 18.600 not applicable not applicable 22.000 22.000 not applicable
not applicable 12.000 12.000 not applicable not applicable 12.200 12.200 not applicable
not applicable 6.100 6.100 not applicable not applicable not available not available not applicable
not applicable 6.250 6.250 not applicable not applicable 8.000 8.000 not applicable
not applicable 3.125 3.125 not applicable not applicable not available not available not applicable
not applicable 1.000 1.000 not applicable not applicable 1.000 1.000 not applicable
not applicable 400 400 not applicable not applicable not available not available not applicable
not applicable 2.500 2.500 not applicable not applicable 2.500 2.500 not applicable
28.643
106.475
COUNTRY
COUNTRY
Production By RegionIn-shell Basis. Three-year Avg (2006-2008)
Americas10 %
Oceania37 %Africa
35 %
USA18 %
Source: AMS, SAMAC and other INC sources.
April 2009 • The Cracker 55
The US pecan crop was completed with an average sized “short” crop. Total supply was very similar to the last short cycle
two years ago with pricing slightly softer due to lower prices in other tree nuts and the overall economic outlook around the world. Total
supply was ample and the carry out at September 30th should be sufficient to get to next year’s crop. As this report was written, China
was re-entering the market buying a lot of in shell pecans. This was keeping prices for in shell and kernels relatively stable.
PECANPECANA
NOIX DE PECANNOCE PECAN
PECANNUbPEKAN CEVIZI
PACANA
180.000
160.000
140.000
120.000
100.000
80.000
60.000
40.000
20.000
0
Source: INC.
350.000
300.000
250.000
200.000
150.000
100.000
50.000
0
US Pecan Supply. In shell basis. Metric Tons
Source: USDA and INC.
Imports Beginning Stocks Production
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Est. 2008
Estimated World Pecans Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
TOTAL
2007 2008 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK
USAMexicoSouth AfricaAustralia (*)
15.368 71.269 86.637 38.108 38.108 38.587 76.695 15.750
0 30.600 30.600 0 0 14.288 14.288 0
0 2.025 2.025 0 0 2.860 2.860 0
665 1.475 2.140 300 300 1.000 1.300 0
16.033 105.369 121.402 38.408 38.408 56.735 95.143 15.750
COUNTRY
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) 82.994 79.393
Estimated World Pecans Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
TOTAL
2007 2008 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK STOCK 1ST SEP SUPPLY STOCK
USA
Mexico
South Africa
Australia (*)
34.150 158.376 192.526 84.685 84.685 85.748 170.433 35.000
0 68.000 68.000 0 0 31.750 31.750 0
0 4.000 4.000 0 0 5.500 5.500 0
1.210 2.950 4.160 545 545 2.000 2.545 0
COUNTRY
35.360 233.326 268.686 85.230 85.230 124.998 210.228 35.000
(*) Beginning stock 1st April.Source: INC.
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) 183.456 175.228
US Crop Trend. Pecans In shell. Metric Tons
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Est. 2008
95.164 153.541 78.427 127.937 83.938 147.846 93.577 158.376 85.748
56 The Cracker • April 2009
PINE NUTPIÑÓNPIGNONPINOLIPINIENKERNEÇAM FISTIGIPINYÓ
Source: China Chamber of Commerce for I/E, Aegean Exporters’ Association and other INC sources.
Estimated World Pine Nuts Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
TOTAL 550 28.000 28.550 150 150 24.625 24.775 1.160
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) (2007/2008) 28.400
COUNTRY
250 8.800 9.050 50 50 9.450 9.500 1.000
0 7.000 7.000 0 0 8.000 8.000 0
0 2.500 2.500 0 0 4.000 4.000 n/a
0 3.200 3.200 0 0 850 850 n/a
0 2.000 2.000 0 0 n/a n/a n/a
250 23.500 23.750 50 50 22.300 22.350 1.000
0 1.200 1.200 0 0 1.200 1.200 100
200 1.575 1.775 100 100 525 625 0
0 1.225 1.225 0 0 400 400 60
100 500 600 0 0 200 200 0
300 4.500 4.800 100 100 2.325 2.425 160
Far East (Pinus Chinensis):
China
Russia
Pakistan
Korea DPR
Mongolia
Total Far East
Mediterranean (Pinus Pinea):
Turkey
Spain
Portugal
Italy
Total Mediterranean
China was the world largest producer of pine nuts in 2008, with 9.450 MT (kernel basis), followed by Russia with an
estimated crop of 8.000 MT, and Pakistan with 4.000 MT. Combined with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
(DPRK) and Mongolia, Far East produced over 90% of world total pine nut produc-tion. Turkey was the leading
country in the Mediterranean basin, with a 2008/09 crop estimated at 1.200 MT (kernel basis).
2006 2007 2008China 9.098 12.479 3.358
Germany 17 25 14
Ukraine 12 10 11
Others 5 63 3
Total 9.132 12.577 3.385
Russia Pine Nuts Exports. Metric Tons
Source: INC.
Russia Pine Nuts Imports. Metric Tons 2006 2007 2008Total 379 591 375
Source: INC.
Russia Pine Nuts Exports. Metric Tons14.000
12.000
10.000
8.000
6.000
4.000
2.000
0
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
4.400 4.320
3.570
5.625 5.280
9.132
12.577
3.385
Exports of pine nuts from Russia fell drastically in 2008 to 3.385 MT, posting their biggest drop in the last seven years. Chi-na remains the top destination (99,2%).
April 2009 • The Cracker 57
USA
California pistachio shipments were at an all time high for the first four months of CY2008 (September to December 2008). The 59.000 MT (130 million pounds) of shipments were 12% higher than last year
and were lead by export demand. Given the limited supply of a small crop year, shipments for the balance of the year will need to decrease. This natural slowing was expected and the industry is on pace to ship over 136.000 MT (300 million pounds). The in-creasing awareness of the health
benefits of pistachios has been effective in driving demand for pistachios throughout the year.S
RIA
IRAN
Pistachio exports in 2008/09 have been estimated
at 61.000 MT, down 71% from the previous period. Domestic consumption is relatively constant, estimated at 38.000 MT in 2008/09.
The 2009 crop is forecast at 150-160.000 MT, subject to good weather conditions.
PISTACHIOPISTACHOPISTACHE
PISTACCHIOPISTAZIE
ANTEP FISTIGIFESTUC
Estimated World Pistachios Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
TOTAL 66.833 622.600 689.433 98.900 98.900 343.800 442.700 54.900
2007 2008 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
USA
Iran
Syria
Turkey
Afghanistan
Greece
Italy
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
45.000 185.000 230.000 55.000 55.000 125.000 180.000 25.000
5.000 310.000 315.000 25.000 25.000 85.000 110.000 0
9.000 70.000 79.000 14.000 14.000 55.000 69.000 5.000
4.833 18.000 22.833 3.300 3.300 47.300 50.600 23.300
2.000 27.000 29.000 1.000 1.000 15.000 16.000 1.000
1.000 9.000 10.000 500 500 12.000 12.500 500
n/a 3.600 3.600 100 100 4.500 4.600 100
590.533
COUNTRY
Source: Southeast Anatolian Exporters’ Association, Antep Pistachio Promotion Group, and other INC sources.
387.800
140.000
120.000
100.000
80.000
60.000
40.000
20.000
0
Export Domestic
California Open Inshell Shipments. Metric Tons
30%
31% 36% 39%32%
48%
49%53%
59%
70% 69% 64% 61% 68% 52% 51% 47% 41%
Source: WPA and ACP.
300.000
250.000
200.000
150.000
100.000
50.000
0
Iranian Pistachios Shipments. Metric Tons
Source: INC.
140.000210.000
61.000
25.000 40.000 38.000
1999/00 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08
2006/2007 2007/2008 Est. 2008/2009
Export Domestic
58 The Cracker • April 2009
WALNUTNUEZNOIXNOCEWALUNBCEVIZNOU
CHINA
Strong consumption during the Spring Festival absorbed lar-ger than normal stocks thanks to moderate prices and promotio-nal campaigns. Chinese markets have been full of dried nuts, one of the most popular snacks in holiday. Exports of shelled wal-nuts in 2008 were 6% lower than
the year before, whereas imports of in shell walnuts totaled 5.500 MT, 2,76 times above the previous season. The market has been more or less stable as the ever strong local consumption relieved the short shipment from overseas markets. It seems that the domestic demand will play a decisive role in the future.
USA
Handler receipts have indicated a 2008 California walnut crop of 394.000 MT (434.300 short tons) according to the California Walnut Board and Commission, exceeding the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Services estimate of 340.200 MT (375.000
short tons). While a record production, inventory entering the season totaled 29.160 MT (32.141 short tons) for a total availability of 423.160 MT (466.441 short tons). Bearing acreage remains the unchan-ged at 88.220 of California’s 98.300 total ha (218.000 of 243.000 total acres).
Estimated World Walnuts Production. Kernel basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 23.144 410.300 433.444 17.740 17.740 467.700 485.440 73.800
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
China
USA
Turkey
France
Chile
India
Italy
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
0 192.000 192.000 0 0 200.000 200.000 0
15.800 126.800 142.600 12.500 12.500 169.000 181.500 68.000
5.800 25.000 30.800 4.000 4.000 28.000 32.000 4.000
0 12.000 12.000 0 0 13.600 13.600 0
134 9.000 9.134 120 120 11.000 11.120 300
1.000 10.000 11.000 800 800 10.000 10.800 1.000
410 4.600 5.010 320 320 5.000 5.320 500
n/a 30.900 30.900 n/a n/a 31.100 31.100 n/a
415.704 411.640
COUNTRY
Source: China Chamber of Commerce for I/E, California Walnut Board & Commission and other INC sources.
Estimated World Walnuts Production. In shell basis. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 55.106 1.002.140 1.057.246 42.216 42.216 1.139.200 1.181.416 172.820
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
China
USA
Turkey
France
Chile
India
Italy
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
0 480.000 480.000 0 0 500.000 500.000 0
36.800 294.800 331.600 29.160 29.160 394.000 423.160 158.400
14.500 62.500 77.000 10.000 10.000 70.000 80.000 10.000
0 30.000 30.000 0 0 34.000 34.000 0
322 21.600 21.922 288 288 26.400 26.688 720
2.500 25.000 27.500 2.000 2.000 25.000 27.000 2.500
984 11.040 12.024 768 768 12.000 12.768 1.200
n/a 77.200 77.200 n/a n/a 77.800 77.800 n/a
1.015.030 1.008.596
COUNTRY
April 2009 • The Cracker 59
PEANUTCACAHUETECACAHUÈTE
ARACHIDEERDNUSS
YER FISTIGICACAUET
US Peanut Supply and Disappearance. Metric Tons
(*) Estimated. (**) Forecast. Source: USDA. Last update: February 11, 2009.
SUPPLY DISAPPEARANCE BEGINNING IMPORTS PRODUCTION TOTAL DOMESTIC CRUSH SEED & EXPORTS TOTAL ENDING STOCKS FOOD RESIDUAL STOCKS
2006/07
2007/08 (*)
2008/09 (**)
982.934 27.669 1.571.243 2.581.846 1.172.535 232.693 213.642 273.516 1.892.386 689.460
689.460 33.112 1.665.590 2.388.162 1.141.691 224.982 213.642 340.194 1.920.509 467.653
467.653 18.144 2.335.092 2.820.889 1.174.803 224.982 246.300 376.481 2.022.567 798.322
Year beg. Aug. 1
Estimated World Peanuts Production. Farmers stock. Metric Tons
Source: China Chamber of Commerce for I/E, USDA, Argentine Chamber of Peanut and other INC sources.
WORLD TOTAL 754.460 31.223.590 31.978.050 803.460 803.460 34.681.092 35.484.551 1.076.722
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING CROP TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
China
India
USA
Nigeria
Indonesia
Argentina
Vietnam
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
0 14.000.000 14.000.000 0 0 15.400.000 15.400.000 n/a
20.000 5.650.000 5.670.000 60.000 60.000 7.124.000 7.184.000 134.000
689.460 1.665.590 2.355.050 689.460 689.460 2.335.092 3.024.551 798.322
0 1.550.000 1.550.000 0 0 1.500.000 1.500.000 n/a
0 1.150.000 1.150.000 24.000 24.000 1.150.000 1.174.000 n/a
0 748.000 748.000 0 0 722.000 722.000 144.400
45.000 460.000 505.000 30.000 30.000 450.000 480.000 n/a
0 6.000.000 6.000.000 0 0 6.000.000 6.000.000 n/a
31.174.590 34.407.830
COUNTRY
CHINA
China has had an unusual 2008/09 peanut season. As this report was written, the market had weakened, mainly due to the global economic crisis as well as high yield, which has resulted in a great excess of supply over demand.
The market was not as brisk as expected during the Spring Festival. According to the China Chamber of Commerce for I/E, the market should stabilize shortly, as soon as oil factories resume production and positive policies are granted.
INDIA
Peanut production in India was estimated at 7.124.000 MT, powered by an upward revision in area data (6,5 million hectares) according to the USDA’s Economic Research Service.
USA
Peanut production was finally estimated at 2.335.000 MT (5,15 billion pounds) by the USDA-NASS, the largest US crop on record, up 3% from the previous forecast and 40% from 2007.
Planted area was revised upward at 620.000 ha (1,53 million acres). Higher prices received in 2007, and attractive contract prices in 2008, led producers to increase acreage. Excellent weather, crop rotation, and minimal disease damage were the main reasons for the record high yields, estimated at 3.416 pounds per acre.
ARGENTINA
As this report was written, the Argentine Chamber of Peanut was
forecasting an unusual carry-over of around 20%, 144.400 MT (the whole crop is usually sold out by mid February), although It was not possible to establish a precise figure yet. The area to be planted with peanut for the next campaign has been estimated at around 268.000 ha.
Exports of peanuts during 2008 totaled 398.583 MT, down 6% from 2007. The Netherlands remained the largest destination (190.073 MT), followed by Russia (35.290 MT) and UK (17.424 MT).
(*) Estimated. (**) Forecast. Source: USDA. Last update: February 11, 2009.
US Peanut Production and Supply. Metric Tons
3.000.000
2.500.000
2.000.000
1.500.000
1.000.000
2.581.8462.388.162
1.665.590
2.820.889
2.335.092
1.571.243
2006/2007 2007/2008 (*) 2008/2009 (**)
Total SupplyProduction
60 The Cracker • April 2009
DRIED FRUITS
TURKEY
In Turkey, latest estimates confirm production of dried apricots at 120.000 MT. Exports
in 2008 fell 7%, from 103.544 MT in 2007 to 96.760 MT. Tur-kish exports of dried apricots had been showing a steady and pronounced upward trend in
recent years. The country had doubled its exports, increasing total shipments from 69.000 MT in 2002 to almost 104.000 MT in 2007. However, exports
have been falling during the last months, as many buyers adopted a “wait and see” position.
World production of dates (6,3 million MT) mainly comes from 20 countries located in the Middle East and North Africa. The production
is especially consumed in the producing countries, with a self-consumption rate of 93%. Exports only represent over 470.000 MT (among which
210.000 MT are re-exported).
According to industry estimates, the United Arab Emi-rates exported about 30.000 MT
of dates in 2008, and imported 200.000 MT.
DRIEDAPRICOTS
DATES
Estimated World Dates Production. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 447.800 6.400.000 6.847.800 457.000 457.000 6.323.000 6.780.000 540.250
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
Saudi Arabia
Egypt
Iran
UAE
Algeria
Pakistan
Tunisia
USA
Israel
Others
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
50.000 1.125.000 1.175.000 80.000 80.000 1.150.000 1.230.000 120.000
125.000 1.130.000 1.255.000 145.000 145.000 1.120.000 1.265.000 170.000
40.000 870.000 910.000 40.000 40.000 910.000 950.000 35.000
30.000 790.000 820.000 40.000 40.000 760.000 800.000 38.000
25.000 650.000 675.000 35.000 35.000 620.000 655.000 40.000
26.000 480.000 506.000 15.000 15.000 450.000 465.000 15.000
1.300 124.000 125.300 1.500 1.500 130.000 131.500 1.800
200 15.500 15.700 200 200 17.000 17.200 200
300 15.500 15.800 300 300 16.000 16.300 250
150.000 1.200.000 1.350.000 100.000 100.000 1.150.000 1.250.000 120.000
6.390.800 6.239.750
COUNTRY
Source: INC.
Estimated World Dried Apricots Production. Metric Tons
TOTAL 8.000 137.100 145.100 0 0 146.950 146.950 0
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
Turkey
Iran
China
USA
South Africa
Australia
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) (2007/2008)
8.000 98.000 106.000 0 0 120.000 120.000 0
0 30.000 30.000 0 0 18.000 18.000 n/a
0 5.000 5.000 0 0 4.500 4.500 n/a
0 2.500 2.500 0 0 2.600 2.600 n/a
0 1.200 1.200 0 0 1.400 1.400 n/a
0 400 400 0 0 450 450 0
145.100
COUNTRY
Source: Aegean Exporters’ Association, Kerman Chamber of Commerce and other INC sources.
April 2009 • The Cracker 61
DRIED FRUITS
Estimated World Dried Figs Production. Metric Tons
TOTAL 0 100.600 100.600 0 0 97.500 97.500 0
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
Turkey
Iran
USA
Greece
Spain
Italy
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) (2007/2008)
0 43.500 43.500 0 0 48.000 48.000 0
0 25.000 25.000 n/a n/a 22.000 22.000 n/a
0 13.100 13.100 0 0 11.000 11.000 n/a
0 10.000 10.000 0 0 8.000 8.000 n/a
0 5.000 5.000 n/a n/a 4.500 4.500 n/a
0 4.000 4.000 n/a n/a 4.000 4.000 n/a
100.600
COUNTRY
Source: Aegean Exporters’ Association, Kerman Chamber of Commerce, California Fig Advisory Board and other INC sources.
TURKEY
Turkey’s 2008/09 dried figs production estimate has been
revised upwards to 48.000 MT, according to the Aegean Ex-porters’ Association. Exports of dried figs and paste in 2008 fell
19% to 37.725 MT. The export value was estimated at some USD 177 million, 10% increase against the previous year, when
Turkey exported 46.344 MT.
DRIEDFIGS
PRUNES
USA
Based on the latest estimates, US prune production reached 113.738 MT (125.000 short tons) in 2008/09, up 51% from last year’s production of 75.547 MT, according to the California Dried Plum Board.
CHILE
Chile’s prune production in 2009 is forecast at 56.000 MT.
ARGENTINA
Harvesting and drying of
Argentine prunes started by mid February. Some areas were affec-ted by hail, but in general the crop was quite good. If climate risks do not reduce the forecast, production is calculated at 46-48.000 MT, mainly with small and medium sizes.
FRANCE
According to IPA, the Inter-national Prune Association, the final crop might reach 26-28.000 MT.
Estimated World Prunes Production. Metric Tons
Source: IPA, CDPB, APECS and other INC sources.
TOTAL 113.540 199.204 312.744 59.972 59.972 248.388 308.360 52.100
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
USAChileArgentinaFranceAustraliaSerbiaItalySouth Africa
CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK)
78.087 75.547 153.634 30.982 30.982 113.738 144.720 20.000 11.897 42.330 54.227 5.277 5.277 53.000 58.277 5.000 100 25.000 25.100 100 100 46.000 46.100 100 22.956 47.700 70.656 23.393 23.393 26.000 49.393 27.000 200 3.200 3.400 0 0 3.800 3.800 0 0 2.851 2.851 0 0 3.000 3.000 0 300 1.376 1.676 0 0 1.500 1.500 0 0 1.200 1.200 220 220 1.350 1.570 0
252.772
COUNTRY
256.260
62 The Cracker • April 2009
DRIED FRUITS
USA
According to the US Department of Commerce, the country increased exports of raisins by 35% in 2008, reaching
160.243 MT. The United King-dom, Germany, Japan and Cana-da remained the top destinations, with shares of 21%, 13%, 12% and 8% respectively.
TURKEY
Latest estimates confirm production of sultanas at 310.000 MT, up 38% from the previous season, according to the Aegean
Exporters’ Association. Exports of sultanas in 2008 reached 198.958 MT, down 17% compared to the previous year. The export value has been estimated at USD 358 million, up 10% against 2007.
RAISINS/SULTANAS/CURRANTS
Source: Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, Foreign Trade Statistics.
USA
Turkey
China
Iran
Chile
South Africa
Greece
Argentina
Australia
Others
65.000 317.500 382.500 55.000 55.000 325.000 380.000 17.800
3.000 240.000 243.000 7.000 7.000 310.000 317.000 17.000
n/a 145.000 145.000 n/a n/a 155.000 155.000 n/a
0 120.000 120.000 5.000 5.000 60.000 65.000 10.000
0 60.000 60.000 0 0 55.000 55.000 0
2.000 40.000 42.000 6.800 6.800 42.350 49.150 4.900
0 25.000 25.000 0 0 32.000 32.000 3.600
0 23.000 23.000 500 500 27.000 27.500 500
1.000 12.000 13.000 500 500 10.000 10.500 500
n/a 71.000 71.000 n/a n/a 76.500 76.500 n/a
Estimated World Raisins, Sultanas & Currants Production. Metric Tons
WORLD TOTAL 71.000 1.053.500 1.124.500 74.800 74.800 1.092.850 1.167.650 54.300
2007/2008 2008/2009 BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING BEGINNING PRODUCTION TOTAL ENDING STOCK SUPPLY STOCK STOCK SUPPLY STOCK
WORLD CONSUMPTION (TOTAL SUPPLY - ENDING STOCK) 1.049.700 1.113.350
COUNTRY
Source: 2008 International Dried Grape Conference, Aegean Exporters’ Association, USDA and other INC sources.
TOTAL 116.069 120.428 108.543 113.878 118.712 118.712 160.243 34,98%
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2007 2008 CHNG
UK
Germany
Japan
Canada
China
Others
24.397 22.497 16.748 17.836 18.469 18.469 34.137 84,84%
6.461 8.013 7.076 9.900 10.988 10.988 20.939 90,57%
18.955 19.515 16.824 16.227 18.487 18.487 19.553 5,77%
12.852 12.758 10.987 12.013 13.174 13.174 13.388 1,63%
4.827 7.679 7.139 7.901 7.738 7.738 6.409 -17,17%
48.577 49.967 49.769 50.001 49.858 49.858 65.818 32,01%
COUNTRY
US Raisins Exports. Metric Tons
California, Chile & Argentina Prune Exports. Metric Tons80.000
70.000
60.000
50.000
40.000
30.000
20.000
10.000
0
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008Source: USDA, CECIM and other INC sources.
66.898
46.055
50.071
64.96362.745
34.81633.878
40.94145.000
14.715
23.605
39.701
26.620 22.263
California Chile. Argentina
42.048
April 2009 • The Cracker 63
Special Report
RUSSIA
Import StatisticsSource: INC.
30.00025.00020.00015.00010.0005.000
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
12.199 17.663 14.151 15.874 20.749 27.532 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Pistachios. Metric Tons
1.394 2.592 3.328 6.374 10.461 14.827 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Walnuts. Metric Tons
16.00014.00012.00010.0008.0006.0004.0002.000
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
5.688 8.037 8.801 7.220 11.901 13.931 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Almonds. Metric Tons
16.00014.00012.00010.0008.0006.0004.0002.000
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
3.982 8.771 7.417 8.571 11.470 13.499 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Hazelnuts. Metric Tons
16.00014.00012.00010.0008.0006.0004.0002.000
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
2.955 5.193 6.333 5.000 6.408 8.975 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Cashews. Metric Tons
10.0009.0008.0007.0006.0005.0004.0003.0002.0001.000
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
1.2001.000
800600400200
0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
996 377 395 361 601 872 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Brazil Nuts. Metric Tons
250200150100500 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
238 8 12 23 29 43 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Pecans. Metric Tons
302520151050 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
1 0 5 24 4 11 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Macadamias. Metric Tons
64 The Cracker • April 2009
RUSSIASpecial Report
41.210 40.148 46.879 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Dried Apricots. Metric Tons
50.000
40.000
30.000
20.000
10.000
0 2006 2007 2008
379 591 375 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Pine Nuts. Metric Tons
94.840 95.600 91.484 1.246 1.836 1.702
2006 2007 2008ShelledIn Shell
Peanuts. Metric Tons
120.000100.00080.00060.00040.00020.000
0 2006 2007 2008
700600500400300200100
0 2006 2007 2008
21.584 28.833 29.932 2006 2007 2008Imports
Prunes. Metric Tons
35.00030.00025.00020.00015.00010.0005.000
0 2006 2007 2008
66.720 67.415 69.340 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Raisins. Metric Tons
80.000
60.000
40.000
20.000
0 2006 2007 2008
19.471 21.280 21.649 2006 2007 2008
Imports
Dates. Metric Tons
25.000
20.000
15.000
10.000
5.000
0 2006 2007 2008
TOTAL
2006 2007 2008
China
Germany
Ukraine
Others
COUNTRY
Pine Nuts Exports. Metric Tons export Statistics
14.000
12.000
10.000
8.000
6.000
4.000
2.000
0 2006 2007 2008
9.132
9.098
17
12
5
9.132
12.479
25
10
63
12.577
3.358
14
11
3
3.386
12.577
3.386
April 2009 • The Cracker 65
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66 The Cracker • April 2009
GRE
EN VAL
LEY
PECA
NS - FUL
L PA
GE
PICK
UP SAM
E AD
ART
FRO
M LAS
T ISSU
E
April 2009 • The Cracker 67
SPAIN Page
Almandras Llopis S.A .....................................75
Alonso Medietrraneo S.A ................................31
Borges .............................................................25
Joan Escoda Nut Processors ...........................27
Jose Borrell ...........................Front Inside Cover
Lago & Machinery S.L. ..................................47
SWITZERLAND
Café Gourmet Ltd./Swiss Gourmey ...............84
TURKEY .....................................................
Antep Pistachio Promotion ...........................33
Ashlock Company ..........................................21
Hazelnut Promotion Group .............................6
UK
Bühler Sortex Ltd. ..........................................65
Kenkko Ltd. ....................................................47
USA
A.P. Esteve .......................................................86
Blue Diamond Growers .................................. 5
Campos Brothers ........................................... 19
Chico Nut Company ......................................15
Crain Walnut Shelling, Inc. .........................80
Fisher Nut Company ......................................11
Golden Gate Nuts ...........................................43
Golden West Nuts, Inc. ...................................48
Green Valley Pecans ................................. 66-67
Hilltop Ranch, Inc. ........................................23
Hughson Nut ..................................................35
Primex...................................Back Inside Cover
Satake USA, Inc. .............................................17
Setton International Foods Back Outside Cover
Vicam .............................................................80
Advertisers
AUSTRALIA Page
Australian Nut Industry Council ..................86
Horticulture Australia Ltd ...............................9
BELGIUM
Best N.V. .........................................................13
Visys NV Sorting Systems ..............................45
CHILE
Exportadora Anakena ..................................86
CHINA
Jilin Zhongxing Foodstuff Holding ..............77
Tianjin Native Produce Import & Export ...46
FRANCE
Eurobroker ....................................................77
Somercom .....................................................85
GERMANY
Eurofins Analytik GMBH ..............................83
Palm Nuts & More KG ..................................86
ITALY
Connect .........................................................86
Gelfruit Italia S.R.L ......................................83
V. Besana S.P.A. ..............................................29
JAPAN
Tanto Corporation ........................................70
MOROCCO
Purnat S.A.R.L...............................................70
68 The Cracker • April 2009
By Maureen Ternus, M.S., R.D.
INC NREF Executive Director
NEWS FROM THE INC NUTRITION RESEARCH & EDUCATION FOUNDATION (INC NREF)
Tree Nuts in 2010 Dietary GuidelinesPreparation for the new 2010 USDA Dietary Guidelines headlined INC NREF activities last January as we presented both oral and written comments to the 2010 USDA Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC). We also submitted copies of the proceedings from the 2007 Nuts & Health Symposium; the British Journal of Nutrition supplement, “Nuts: Nutrition and Health
Outcomes;” and the new tree nut book, “Tree Nuts:
Composition, Phytochemicals and Health Effects.” A research reference list with over 100 articles highlighting tree nut studies published in the last five years; a tree nut fact sheet; and a chart showing individual tree nut clinical studies on heart disease helped to position tree nuts as a healthy whole food worthy of its own category of recognition. Nuts and seeds are currently recognized within the protein category of foods in the USDA Food Guide Pyramid.
Nutrition Research FeaturedIn the letter to the DGAC, members were reminded of the FDA qualified health claim announced in 2003. This claim, which resulted from a petition filed by INC NREF, states, “Scientific evidence suggests but does not prove that eating 1.5 ounces per day of most nuts, as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, may reduce the risk of heart disease.” Since 2003 there has been a dramatic increase in the number of studies showing not only the positive role of nuts in reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but the potential benefits of nut consumption on diabetes and a healthy body weight. Six key points were emphasized for the 2010 DGAC to review as they consider re-positioning tree nuts in the
new guidelines including: Current U.S. nut consumption; The role of nuts in reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease; Emerging
research on the positive effect of nuts on diabetes and a healthy body weight; Nuts
in healthy diet patterns; Current statistics on the prevalence and incidence of tree
nut allergy; and the important role of nuts
in the American diet. Comments in each of these categories are
considered below. (A Tree Nut Fact Sheet included in this article summarizes these
comments and is available to INC members).
U.S. Nut ConsumptionWhile the USDA ERS food availability data shows that tree nut consumption has increased 45% overall since the mid 1990’s, consumption still falls short of current recommendations. The 2003 FDA qualified health claim for nuts and heart disease recommends 1.5 ounces of nuts per day, but few people actually consume this amount on a daily basis. In the 2001- 2004 What We Eat in America/NHANES survey, 34% of those surveyed consumed nuts but most only ate about ¾ of an ounce—roughly half of the recommended amount.
Nuts and Cardiovascular DiseaseSince the release of the 2005 U.S. Dietary Guidelines, a number of new randomized clinical trials have provided further evidence that nuts can help reduce the risk of heart disease by significantly lowering total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, and in some cases significantly increasing HDL. There have been 31 studies conducted over the last decade or so that have looked at the effect of a single nut on CVD. Twenty-five of those studies showed that nuts significantly lowered total cholesterol; 25 studies showed a significant reduction in LDL cholesterol; and in 13 studies, nuts significantly increased HDL cholesterol. All epidemiologic studies conducted in the U.S. have shown a positive relationship of nut consumption to coronary heart disease (CHD) incidence. In a pooled analysis of 4 U.S. epidemiologic studies, individuals who ate the most nuts (about 1 oz., ≥5 x/wk) had about a 35% reduced risk of coronary heart disease. The protective effect of nuts on CVD does not seem to be due only to their fat, vitamin and mineral content; their fiber matrix and wide range of phytonutrients may also play a role. Nuts are a source of phytochemicals such as phytosterols, phenolic compounds and flavonoids. Phytochemicals have been associated with a variety of bioactivities including antioxidant, hypocholesterolemic and anti-inflammatory actions that may affect the initiation and progression of several pathogenic processes that can lead to chronic disease, including CVD.
Nuts and Diabetes When it comes to diabetes, emerging research suggests nut consumption may have a significant impact. The Nurse’s Health Study indicated that frequent nut consumption (≥5 x/wk) was associated with a 27% reduction in relative risk of developing diabetes, compared to those who rarely or never ate nuts. Acute feeding studies have demonstrated the ability of nuts, when eaten with carbohydrate (bread, rice and pasta), to depress postprandial glycemia. A new study with 119 subjects with type 2 diabetes has looked at the impact of nut consumption on HbA1c levels. The results have been submitted for presentation at meetings throughout 2009 and a manuscript is being prepared for publication.
April 2009 • The Cracker 69
While more research is needed on the effect of nut consumption on blood glucose levels (i.e., HbA1c), the possible beneficial impact of nuts on coronary heart disease (CHD) in diabetics is better understood. This alone may be enough justification to include nuts in the diets of diabetics, to potentially decrease their risk of CHD.
Nuts and a Healthy Body WeightWhen it comes to nuts and weight, six epidemiological and six clinical studies show that nut consumption is not associated with higher body weight. In fact, the epidemiological data have been consistent in indicating that nut consumers have lower body mass indices (BMIs) than non-nut consumers. And, a recent NHANES analysis further substantiated that nut consumers had lower BMIs than non-nut consumers. Moreover, clinical trials have revealed little or no weight change in those consuming nuts over one-to-six months. Possible reasons? (1) Satiety value of nuts from unsaturated fats, fiber and protein and the spontaneous reduction in food intake; (2) incomplete fat absorption: loss of fat in the feces; and (3) a potential increase in resting expenditure with chronic nut consumption may contribute to the less than predicted weight gain.
Nuts in Healthy Diet PatternsIn recent years there has been much attention on the Mediterranean diet and the health benefits that various types of plant-based meal patterns provide (i.e., fruits, vegetables, nuts, whole grains). Epidemiological studies have shown a positive association between the Mediterranean diet and reduced mortality and morbidity for CVD and a longer life span. The beneficial effects of the Mediterranean diet in the prognosis of CHD have been demonstrated in a large randomized, secondary prevention trial—the Lyon Heart Study. This trial, which compared a Mediterranean-type diet to a prudent Western-type diet, showed a dramatic decrease in the overall mortality and cardiac mortality (70% and 81% respectively) in the intervention group. The Spanish have conducted a significant amount of research examining the effects of tree nuts on health promotion and disease prevention and have the distinction of conducting the first primary prevention, large scale, long-term clinical trial that incorporates tree nuts. In the PREDIMED study, in late 2003, 9,000 high risk people 55-80 years of age with no history of heart disease were randomized into a control group or intervention group with 1 l of olive oil weekly or 30 g nuts daily (walnuts, hazelnuts and almonds). Participants were assigned to a low-fat diet or to one of two Mediterranean diets. After 3 months, compared to the low-fat diet, the two Mediterranean diets produced beneficial changes in most outcomes including blood glucose, systolic blood pressure and total cholesterol: HDL ratio.
Epidemiological studies have also suggested that the Mediterranean diet may help reduce the risk of developing metabolic syndrome. In a recent study using subjects from the PREDIMED study, researchers concluded that a traditional Mediterranean diet enriched with nuts could be a useful tool in managing metabolic syndrome. Like the Mediterranean-style diets, several U.S. studies featuring increased consumption of plant foods, including the Portfolio, OMNIHeart and Prudent diets, have shown that combining a range of cholesterol-lowering plant foods may benefit cardiovascular disease risk both by reducing serum lipids and blood pressure, and may help lower the risk for type 2 diabetes. All of these meal patterns, like the DASH diet, found significant beneficial effects from a plant-based diet that included nuts in particular.
The Prevalence and Incidence of Tree Nut AllergyDespite all of the potential health benefits from nuts, some people do have nut allergies. Tree nuts are included in the list of more common foods known to provoke an allergic response in predisposed individuals, but the prevalence of tree nut allergy is very low in the US and in other countries. The estimated prevalence of allergy to the most common allergenic foods in the US is listed in Table 2. Since the passage of the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA) in 2004, the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Threshold Working Group explored in depth the state of the science behind food allergy as a prerequisite for developing labeling regulations for foods containing allergenic ingredients, and strategies for developing biological thresholds for allergenic proteins.
Allergy Prevalence in the United States (FDA Threshold Working Group, 2008)
% of Population Allergic to:
Age Group All Allergens Milk Egg Peanuts Tree Nuts Fish Shellfisha Wheat Soy
Children 6.0 2.5 1.3 0.8 0.2 0.1 0.0 Unkb 0.2
Adults 3.7 0.3 0.2 0.6 0.5 0.4 2.0 Unk Unk
aShellfish includes both crustaceans and mollusks; bUnk = unknownTable Sources: Cordle 2004 ; Sampson 1997 , 2004 , 2005 ; Sicherer et al 2003 ; Sicherer et al 2004
As shown above, the prevalence of tree nut allergy in the US is small, estimated at 0.2% of children and 0.5% of adults. The telephone survey used to estimate the prevalence of nut allergy (both peanut and tree nut)analyzed responses of almost 13,500 people (N = 13,493), in which only 166 had an allergy to some type of nut (either peanut or tree nut). No peer-reviewed report that estimates allergy prevalence to individual tree nuts in the US has been identified to date.
– Continued on page 70
70 The Cracker • April 2009
– Continued from page 69
NEWS FROM THE INC NUTRITION RESEARCH & EDUCATION FOUNDATION (INC NREF)
A closer look at the two studies that estimated the US prevalence of allergy of nuts of any type (both peanuts and tree nuts) by means of nationwide telephone surveys are of interest. The first survey included 12,032 individuals from a total sampling of 4,374 households. The investigators concluded that peanut and/or tree nut allergy affects about 1.1% of the US population, or, about 3 million people. The follow-up telephone survey was reported in 2003, in which 13,493 individuals participated from 4,855 households. The overall rate of allergy to tree nuts, peanuts, or both were not different between the two studies, however the rate of nut allergy prevalence in children had doubled from the survey conducted in 1999, primarily from an increase in self-reported allergy to peanut *0.4% in 1997, and 0.8% in 2002, (P = 0.05). No such finding occurred for tree nuts. Knowledge of the health benefits of tree nuts in human diets has increased in recent years, and the data are sufficiently consistent and positive to encourage tree nut consumption in the US population. Though tree nut allergy exists in sensitive individuals, prevalence estimates in the US fall well below 1% of the US population, and international estimates suggest that tree nut allergy prevalence is low in other countries as well.
The Important Role of Nuts in the American DietThe real challenge is to encourage Americans to consume more nuts. According to the 2001- 2004 What We Eat in America/NHANES survey, approximately 60% of the nuts consumed are as snacks. Data show that
many people obtain ~25% of their calories from snacks. And for those who consumed nuts as snacks, nuts provided 25-35% of their: total fat, poly-and mono-unsaturated fats, linoleic acid, magnesium, copper and vitamin E. Moreover, in a recent NHANES analysis, tree nut consumption was associated with increased (p<0.01) consumption of fruit, whole grains, meat equivalents, and oils, and with a decrease (p<0.01) in solid fats and added sugars. According to some experts, replacing snacks high in refined carbohydrates with nuts could have a positive impact on nutrient density and risk of chronic disease. For example, just ¼ to ⅓ cup of nuts per day would provide protein, unsaturated fatty acids, fiber, vitamin E, folate, magnesium and potassium—many of which are shortfalls in the American diet. Knowledge of the health benefits of tree nuts in human diets has increased significantly in recent years, and the data are sufficiently consistent and positive to encourage nut consumption in the U.S. population.
To access all of the INC NREF comments to the DGAC please go to: http://www.cnpp.usda.gov/DGAs2010CommentSummaries-Mtg2.htm and look in the “food groups” section under “International Tree Nut Council” or “Ternus.” A second set of comments was submitted in March 2009.
For more information on any INC NREF project please contact Maureen Ternus at [email protected]. C
April 2009 • The Cracker 71
Nut Consumption v The qualified health claim for nuts and heart disease recommends 1.5 ounces of nuts per day to reduce the risk of heart disease (FDA 2003). v In the 2001-2004 What We Eat in America/NHANES survey, 34% of those surveyed consumed nuts, but most ate ~ ¾ of an ounce—roughly half of the recommended amount (King et al, 2008).
Research: CVD – 31 randomized clinical trials have shown that nuts can help reduce the risk of heart disease.
v 25 significantly lowered total cholesterol v 25 significantly lowered LDL cholesterol v 13 significantly increased HDL
Diabetes – A number of epidemiological and clinical trials have suggested that nut consumption may have a significant impact on diabetes.
v In the Nurse’s Health Study frequent nut consumption (≥5 x/wk) was associated with a 27% reduction in relative risk of developing diabetes, compared to those who rarely or never ate nuts (Jiang et al, 2002). v Acute feeding studies have demonstrated the ability of nuts, when eaten with carbohydrate (bread, rice and pasta) to depress postprandial glycemia (Jenkins et al, 2008).
Weight/Satiety – 6 epidemiological and 6 clinical studies show that nut consumption is not associated with higher body weight.
v In a recent NHANES analysis nut consumers had lower BMIs than non-nut consumers (Fulgoni 2009).
v Potential reasons? (1) Satiety value of nuts from unsaturated fats, fiber and protein; (2) incomplete fat absorption: the fat in nuts doesn’t appear to be fully absorbed; and (3) a potential increase in resting expenditure with chronic nut consumption may contribute to the less than predicted weight gain (Mattes et al, 2008).
Tree Nut Allergy v 0.2% of children and 0.5% of adults in the U.S. are allergic to tree nuts (FDA 2003; Sicherer et al, 2003).
Nuts in a Healthy Meal PatternSeveral U.S. studies featuring increased consumption of plant foods (nuts, vegetables, etc), including the Portfolio (Jenkins et al, 2008), OMNIHeart (Appel et al, 2005) and Prudent (van Dam et al, 2002) diets, have shown that combining a range of cholesterol-lowering plant foods may benefit cardiovascular disease risk both by reducing serum lipids and blood pressure, and may help lower the risk for type 2 diabetes.
Role of Nuts in the Diet
v ~ 60% of nuts consumed are as snacks; Many people obtain ~25% of their calories from snacks (King et al, 2008)
v “Replacing snacks high in refined carbohydrates with nuts could have a positive impact on nutrient density and risk of chronic disease (King et al, 2008).”
TREE NUT FACT SHEET
From the editor:In the last issue of The Cracker, the following release regarding the 2007 Nuts & Health Symposium proceedings was inadvertently left out of this column. We apologize for any confusion.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Maureen Ternus, M.S., R.D.
GO NUTS FOR HEALTHHave you had your handful of tree nuts today?
Davis, CA, August 21, 2008 – “More and more research shows the positive impact of tree nut consumption on satiety and weight management, as well as a number of chronic diseases including heart disease and diabetes,” states Lindsay Allen, PhD, Director of the USDA ARS Western Human Nutrition Research Center. Dr. Allen was commenting on proceedings from the Nuts and Health Symposium in the September 2008 issue of the Journal of
Nutrition.
Epidemiologic studies show that consuming tree nuts (almonds, Brazils, cashews, hazelnuts, pecans, pine nuts, pistachios, macadamias and walnuts) five or more times per week is associated with a reduced risk of developing both diabetes and heart disease. In one analysis, individuals who ate the most nuts had about a 35 percent reduced risk of coronary heart disease. While the FDA qualified health claim for nuts and heart disease recommends 1.5 ounces of nuts per day, few people actually consume this amount on a daily basis. In the 2001-2004 What We Eat in America/NHANES survey, 34 percent of those surveyed consumed nuts but most only ate about ¾ of an ounce—roughly half of the recommended amount. And, approximately 60 percent of the nuts were consumed as snacks. According to Janet King, PhD, co-chair of the 2007 Nuts and Health Symposium and past chair of the 2005 USDA Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, “Many people consume as much as 25 percent of their total caloric intake from snacks. If we could replace snacks high in refined carbohydrates with just ¼ to ⅓ cup of nuts per day we could have a positive impact on nutrient density and the risk of chronic disease.” Moreover, regular nut consumers do not weigh more than those who do not consume nuts despite eating roughly 250 additional calories per day. “Research shows that nuts can actually help maintain body weight,” states Maureen Ternus, M.S., R.D., Executive Director of INC NREF. “Tree nuts contain beneficial unsaturated fats (mono- and polyunsaturated fats), protein and fiber, all of which provide a feeling of fullness.” In addition, studies have shown that the fat in nuts may not be fully absorbed and there may be an increase in resting energy expenditure (the calories burned when you’re resting) with regular nut consumption. In 2007, the US Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service, Western Human Nutrition Research Center (USDA ARS WHNRC) and the International Tree Nut Council Nutrition Research & Education Foundation (INC NREF) joined forces for a 2½ day symposium on nuts and health. To access the 2007 Nuts and Health Symposium proceedings in the September 2008 issue of the Journal of Nutrition go to www.nuthealth.org
PRESS RELEASE
72 The Cracker • April 2009
INC NREF believes that based
on science, tree nuts deserve a more
prominent position that better defines
the nutritional value of tree nuts in the
US Dietary Guidelines and the American
diet. They are currently pictured in the
Food Guide Pyramid beside protein sources
including meat and beans. In the existing
USDA Dietary Guidelines of 2005, tree nuts
are mentioned under Fats in chapter 6 as
follows:
Keep total fat intake between 20 to 35
percent of calories, with most fats coming
from sources of polyunsaturated and
monounsaturated fatty acids, such as fish,
nuts, and vegetable oils.
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans
(Dietary Guideline) provides science-based
advice to promote health and to reduce
risk for major chronic diseases through
diet and physical activity. Major causes of
morbidity and mortality in the United States
are related to poor diet and a sedentary
lifestyle. Some specific diseases linked to
poor diet and physical inactivity include
cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes,
hypertension, osteoporosis, and certain
cancers. Furthermore, poor diet and
physical inactivity, resulting in an energy
imbalance (more calories consumed than
expended), are the most important factors
contributing to the increase in overweight
and obesity. Combined with physical activity,
following a diet that does not provide
excess calories should enhance the health
of most individuals. How tree nuts fit into
the dialogue about disease and weight
maintenance is now being defined for the
new 2010 Dietary Guidelines Advisory
Committee (DGAC) by INC NREF.
An important component of each 5-year
revision of the Dietary Guidelines is the
analysis of new scientific information by
the DGAC. This committee is appointed
by the Secretaries of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS)
and the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA). This analysis, published in the
DGAC Report (http://www.health.gov/dietaryguidelines/dga2005/ report/),
is the primary resource for development of
the new and/or revised guidelines by the
Departments.
The intent of the Dietary Guidelines is
to summarize and synthesize knowledge
regarding individual nutrients and food
components into recommendations for
a pattern of eating that can be adopted
by the public. In this publication, Key
Recommendations are grouped under nine
inter-related focus areas. The reference
made to nuts above is mentioned in the Fat
section of the recommendations. There
are numerous other areas that tree nuts
could be considered in the 2010 document.
The recommendations are based on the
preponderance of scientific evidence
for lowering risk of chronic disease and
promoting health. These are integrated
messages that should be implemented as a
whole. Taken together, they encourage most
Americans to eat fewer calories, be more
active, and make wiser food choices.
A basic premise of the Dietary Guidelines
is that nutrient needs should be met primarily
by consuming foods. In certain cases, fortified
foods and dietary supplements may be
useful sources of one or more nutrients that
otherwise might be consumed in less than
recommended amounts. However, dietary
supplements cannot replace a healthful diet.
It has long been an INC NREF position that
tree nuts are a nutritious whole food. They
also provide an array of nutrients and other
WHY ARE THE US DIETARY
April 2009 • The Cracker 73
compounds that may have beneficial effects
on health.
Two examples of eating patterns that
exemplify the Dietary Guidelines are the
USDA Food Guide (http://www.usda.gov/cnpp/pyramid.html) and the DASH
(Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension)
Eating Plan. Considerable work has been
done in the nut industry to determine how
tree nuts fit into the DASH Diet.
Both of these eating patterns are designed
to integrate dietary recommendations into
a healthy way to eat for most individuals.
These eating patterns are not weight loss
diets, but rather illustrative examples of
how to eat in accordance with the Dietary
Guidelines. Both eating patterns are
constructed across a range of calorie levels
to meet the needs of various age and gender
groups. For the USDA Food Guide, nutrient
content estimates for each food group and
subgroup are based on population-weighted
food intakes. Nutrient content estimates for
the DASH Eating Plan are based on selected
foods chosen for a sample 7-day menu. While
originally developed to study the effects of
an eating pattern on the prevention and
treatment of hypertension, DASH is one
example of a balanced eating plan consistent
with the 2005 Dietary Guidelines.
Throughout most of the Dietary Guidelines
publication, examples use a 2,000-calorie
level as a reference for consistency with
the Nutrition Facts Panel. Although this
level is used as a reference, recommended
calorie intake will differ for individuals
based on age, gender, and activity level.
At each calorie level, individuals who eat
nutrient-dense foods may be able to meet
their recommended nutrient intake without
consuming their full calorie allotment. The
remaining calories—the discretionary calorie
allowance—allow individuals flexibility to
consume some foods and
beverages that may contain
added fats, added sugars,
and alcohol.
The recommendations
in the Dietary Guidelines
are for Americans over 2
years of age. It is important
to incorporate the food
preferences of different
racial/ethnic groups,
vegetarians, and other
groups when planning
diets and developing
educational programs
and materials. The vegetarian diet seems
to be gaining more recognition among the
2010 Guidelines. Tree nuts have long been
a preferred food by vegetarians. The USDA
Food Guide and the DASH Eating Plan are
flexible enough to accommodate a range of
food preferences and cuisines.
The Dietary Guidelines is intended
primarily for use by policymakers,
healthcare providers, nutritionists, and
nutrition educators. The information in
the Dietary Guidelines is used for the
development of educational materials
and aids policymakers in designing and
implementing nutrition-related programs,
including federal food, nutrition education,
and information programs. In addition, this
publication has the potential to provide
authoritative statements for the Food and
Drug Administration Modernization Act
(FDAMA). Because the Dietary Guidelines
contains discussions where the science is
emerging, only statements included in the
Executive Summary and the sections titled
“Key Recommendations,” which reflect the
preponderance of scientific evidence, can
be used for identification of authoritative
statements. C
GUIDELINES IMPORTANT?
74 The Cracker • April 2009
INC | NREF Partners with Culinary Institute to Promote Increased Use of Tree Nuts in American Foodservice
The International Tree Nut Council’s Nutrition Research & Education Foundation (INC-NREF) recently sponsored a leadership retreat at The Culinary Institute of America at Greystone, the CIA’s Napa Valley campus in St. Helena, California. The retreat, Worlds of Healthy Flavors, is an annual leadership retreat co-presented by the CIA and the Harvard School of Public Health. This invitation-only event is designed to assist corporate and executive chefs of chain restaurants, hotels, colleges & universities, and supermarkets expand options for healthy menu choices for their customers. Participants at the January 2009 retreat included culinary, marketing, supply chain, and nutrition executives from top chains like Applebee’s, Boston Market, Chili’s, Dunkin’ Donuts, McDonald’s, Outback Steakhouse, Panera Bread, TGI Fridays, and Subway, chains that collectively feed millions of consumers each day. Imagine the impact in sales if one or more of these chains adds a tree nut to a new menu item. This program for this event includes presentations by top nutrition researchers along with culinary presentations and demonstrations by cuisine experts representing Asia, Latin America, and the Mediterranean, cuisines that often include nuts as part of their traditional plant-based diets. A ten-member Scientific Advisory Committee—made up of top nutrition researchers, many who publish research on tree nuts like Drs. Frank Hu and Janet King—advises the CIA on the top nutrition issues affecting the public that should be addressed each year. Top nutrition issues addressed at the 2009 conference included sugar-sweetened beverages and risk of type 2 diabetes, sodium and heart disease risk, and nutrition labeling on menus and its effect on consumer menu selections.
Programming Focused on Tree Nuts Programming on tree nuts included a presentation by Dr. Frank Hu of the Harvard School of Public Health titled, “The Health Benefits of Nuts.” In his presentation, Dr. Hu highlighted research showing that people who eat nuts five or more times a week have the lowest risk of heart disease and Type 2 diabetes. (A copy of Dr. Hu’s presentation can be accessed at www.ciaprochef.com/wohf2009.) Dr. Hu’s presentation was followed by culinary presentations and demonstrations by chefs Joyce Goldstein and Iliana de la Vega titled, “Nut-Based
Sauces of the Mediterranean & Mexico.”
Chef Goldstein emphasized the traditional use of tree nuts in the Mediterranean, and showcased nut-based sauces with almonds, pistachios, and walnuts while Chef de la Vega focused on the traditional use of peanuts and seeds in Mexican sauces like moles, salsas, and spreads. As the chefs were discussing each of their sauces audience members tasted the sauces. Overwhelming favorites included the Spanish Romesco sauce made with almonds and hazelnuts, and the Greek Almond Skordalia. In past years, tree nut programming at Worlds of Healthy Flavors has focused on nuts as sources of healthy fats and plant-based protein. While the volume foodservice audience appreciates the health and nutrition benefits of nuts, the chefs need to come up with menu items their customers will buy again and again. This year the programming focus on nuts shifted to flavor. The term “crave-able” was used by many of the chefs to describe the appeal of the nut-based sauces and their ability to make “good-for-you” foods taste better.
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76 The Cracker • April 2009
Media Coverage
The Worlds of Healthy Flavors always attracts a stellar group
of writers and editors. In 2009 media guests included writers
from Eating Well, The New York Times, The Atlanta-Journal
Constitution, Women’s Day, and The Boston Globe.
The nut-based sauces session was so impactful that media
guest Martha Rose Schulman decided to devote an entire week
of her New York Time’s “Recipes for Health” column to nut-based
sauces. Her articles and recipes ran the week of February 9.
(Martha’s articles and recipes can be accessed at www.nytimes.com. Simply search by “nut-based
sauces” to find this series.)
Worlds of Healthy Flavors Addresses Important Issues for Foodservice Operators Worlds of Healthy Flavors comes at a pivotal time for American foodservice. American menus are being fundamentally reshaped by an accelerating interest in world culinary traditions from Latin America, Asia, and the Mediterranean as Americans find themselves drawn to bolder, more assertive flavors from a broad range of cultures. Chefs and operators have never had a wider range of ingredients, flavors and flavor dynamics, recipes, and menu concepts from which to choose. As exciting as this unprecedented range of flavors is, most culinary professionals know that they are just in the early stages of understanding what these flavors represent, and how best to take advantage of them in their operations. At the same time, on the scientific front, leading experts in nutrition research continue to refine our understanding of healthy menu choices and what constitutes a healthy diet. And yet—as evidenced by alarmingly high rates of diet-linked chronic diseases, from heart disease and cancer to obesity and type II diabetes—many Americans clearly find it a challenge to actually make healthy meal choices. For their part, chefs and operators of chain restaurants, hotels, supermarkets, and volume foodservice often feel discouraged about trying to address what they perceive as customers’ mixed messages about healthy meal choices, and what they sense is still “shifting ground” under ongoing nutrition research outcomes. Adding confusion to the mix is the plethora of branded weight loss programs, books, and media stories—all competing for attention and converts. And few in the foodservice industry have the appetite to repeat failed healthy menus initiatives from the ‘80s and ‘90s. Worlds of Healthy Flavors brings together long-term foodservice flavor trends with approaches to healthy cooking that represent the thinking of the best and
– Continued from page 74
the brightest in current nutrition research. The project leverages the strategy that growing interest in a broader range of world flavors gives chefs and operators many more options to deliver healthier menu choices to their customers.
The CIA’s Focus on World FlavorsSince opening its Napa Valley campus in 1995, The Culinary Institute of America has been promoting plant-based traditional cuisines and world flavors in all educational initiatives. There are many reasons for this focus, but most significant is the fact the Greg Drescher, one of the creators of the Mediterranean Diet Pyramid, is the executive director of strategic initiatives at the CIA. “We’ve known for years that a Mediterranean-diet promotes good health. We’ve also known that Mediterranean chefs and home cooks alike have developed incredible techniques and recipes for creating flavorful, craveable foods. The Mediterranean diet offers the opportunity to promote great-tasting food that, oh, by the way, also happens to be good-for-you. This is a message that we love to communicate and chefs love to hear,” says Drescher. “Another message the culinary community is pleased to hear is that not all fats are created equal, that there are ‘good’ fats and ‘bad’ fats, and that nuts are filled with the ‘good’ fats. We’ve come a long way in terms of educating the public about ‘good’ fats, but there’s still a long way to go. Many volume foodservice operators still talk about developing ‘low-fat’ menu items because they have consumers who want them. We need partners like INC-NREF and others in the tree nut industry to help us continue to educate the culinary community about this important issue. Nuts have so much to offer in terms of nutrition as well as flavor!” For more information please contact Amy Myrdal Miller at [email protected]. C
April 2009 • The Cracker 7718 The CraCker • January 2008
September 2005 • the CraCker 23
cess for the Assessment of Scientific Support for Claims on
Wholegrain foods and
In February 2002 theJHCI expert committeeand the council publishedits findings on a healthclaim for whole grainfoods and heart health(Joint Health Claims Initia-tive, 2002). The scientistsconcluded from the evi-dence presented in thescientific dossier that‘people with a healthy
September 2005 • the CraCker 23
Subscribe! The Cracker
The II International Congress on Food and Nutrition was held last October in Istanbul, Turkey, which featured “Food for Future”. Over 600 participants from 20 different countries attended the congress to review recent research and key topics for the future. Throughout the 3-day congress, there were 140 oral and 332 poster presentations, covering topics such as Functional Foods, Nutraceuticals, Control of Micronutrients Deficiencies, Food Fortification, Obesity, Food Safety, Organic Foods, Innovation and New Trends.
Mr. Pino Calcagni, on behalf of the INC Scientific and Government Affairs Committee, was Chairman of the Symposium “Hazelnut: the Nut of Choice for Health” and gave a presentation on the “Past, Present and Future Aspects of Hazelnut-Worldwide.” Mr. Calcagni reviewed INC activities, including an overview of the hazelnut industry, including worldwide statistics and technical and scientific issues. The conference was organized by TUBITAK and supported by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, EC Joint Research Centre, European Technology Platform Food for Life and the Campden & Chorleywood Food Research Association.
TURKEY HOSTS II INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON FOOD AND NUTRITION
78 The Cracker • April 2009
The Western Pistachio Association (WPA) successfully hosted the annual U.S. Pistachio Industry Conference last February in Santa Barbara, California. The Conference theme highlighting democratic unity unique to the Association, where members work “hand in hand” to meet challenges, was evident in unprecedented support. Sponsorships, exhibit reservations, registrations and room block sales all exceeded expectations. Approximately 450 attendees registered for the three-day event that began with a golf tournament, included an impressive array of speakers, an elegant seaside Gala and concluded with a Meeting of the Membership where Board Members and Officers were elected. Board Members elected to serve as Officers for the year were: Chairman: Dr. Michael Woolf; Vice-Chairman: Brian Blackwell; and Secretary/Treasurer: H.P. Anderson, III. The following individuals, representing pistachio producers from California, Arizona and New Mexico, were elected to the 2009 Board of Directors: H.P. Anderson, III, Pioneer Nursery; Brian Blackwell, Blackwell Farming Co.; Thomas Dille, Little Creek; Larry Easterling, Kettleman Pistachio Growers; Jim Graham, Cochise Groves; Dr. John Lake, Pistachios Unlimited; Dr. Robert Lake, Pistachios Unlimited; Larry Lowder, Alkali Hollow Farms; Steven Moore, Huntley-Moore Farms; Richard Paslay, Agri-World Cooperative; George Schweers, Eagle Ranch; Joshua Setton, Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella; Gary Smith, Eriksson LLC; Rick Strain, Strain Orchards; Jimi Valov, Valov & Sons Farming; Brian Watte, George Watte & Sons; Dr. Michael Woolf, California Valley Land Co., and Jim Zion, Meridian Nut Growers. United States Senator Barbara Boxer, representing the State of California, also addressed the group. She discussed her efforts to lower foreign trade barriers to pistachios worldwide and read a letter prepared for U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, asking him to expedite the proposed expansion of the Federal Marketing Order for U.S. pistachios. This amendment to the existing Order would establish food safety quality regulations for all producers of pistachios grown within the United States. Boxer indicated to the group that it has a friend in Washington, D.C. prepared to assist them on issues of importance to the pistachio industry. Soumen Bagchi, Consul, Economic and Political, Consulate General of India also spoke to the group on his country’s objective in the Doha round of trade negotiations and the impact on future pistachio exports. He indicated his country was aware of the existing tariff on U.S. pistachios of 30 percent and said that the Government of India and the Indian Embassy in Washington, D.C. have
received several letters from the WPA to reduce the tariff rate. During a Grower Session, industry members tackled a topic of great concern to many: the current California drought and its effect on water deliveries controlled by State and Federal water projects on which a large percentage of California growers depend. At press time, deliveries to many irrigation districts were set at zero. Unless affected growers have alternative sources of water, such as groundwater wells, no water will be available to them for irrigation of their land. During the last major drought of the 1990s in California, growers traded water supplies through a “Drought Bank.” Since then, regulations have changed, and a current water conveyance system has not yet been approved by the government which exacerbates the problem. A panel of experts discussed the current water crisis which included Jerry Johns, Deputy Director, California Department of Water Resources; Tim Quinn, Executive Director, Association of California Water Agencies; Mike Wade, Executive Director, California Farm Water Coalition; and Michael Jackson, Area Director, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Huell Howser, Host of California Gold and California’s Water broadcast on the Public Broadcasting System (PBS), hosted the panel. All agreed that despite recent rain and snowfall, the previous two years of drought have left many reservoirs at lower levels than experienced in the last 30 years. Further complicating the problem is a series of lawsuits by environmental groups that have given priority for water supplies to fish and wildlife habitat over farmers. The most probable solution is change at the federal level to modify the Endangered Species Act (ESA), the legislation upon which these environmental lawsuits are based. Growers were also given the opportunity to ask questions of WPA member processor representatives during the Processor Forum moderated by WPA Executive Director, Richard Matoian. Participants included: Ali Amin, - Primex Farms; Bob Keenan - Keenan Farms; Jim Zion – Meridian Nut/A&P Growers; Mia Cohen – Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella; Chuck Nichols – Nichols Farms; and Kable Munger – Monarch Nut Company. The WPA Program Update Session provided a summary of activities conducted on behalf of the U.S. pistachio industry, including: Governmental Affairs - Bob Schramm of Schramm, Williams & Associates; Nutrition Research - Dr. Constance Geiger; Nutrition Promotion - Beth Kleineman and Amie DeLuca of Henson Consulting; Production Research - Bob Beede, UC Farm Advisor; and a California Pistachio Export Council (CPEC) update from
Western Pistachio Association Unites Growers at Second Annual U.S. Pistachio Industry Conference
By Richard Matoian
Executive Director
Western Pistachio
Association
April 2009 • The Cracker 79
Pistachios – Heart Healthy Pistachios are a cholesterol-free, heart-healthy snack that contain high levels of vitamin B6 and fiber with just 1.5 grams of saturated fat. They gained the attention of health professionals in the U.S. and abroad beginning with the release of the qualified health claim relating to nuts released by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It states: Scientific evidence suggests, but does not prove, that eating 1.5 ounces per day of most nuts, (such as pistachios), as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol may reduce the risk of heart disease. This endorsement, along with several prominent studies that followed conducted by Penn State University that resulted in papers being published in reputable medical journals, have legitimized promotion of the heart health message for U.S. pistachios. Additionally, new health benefits continue to be identified, including the potential relationship between pistachio consumption and lowered risk of diabetes. The WPA is currently conducting a study at the University of Toronto, Canada to investigate this promising development.
Marketing Manager Jean Valentine and EU representative George Smith. On a lighter note, attendees to the U.S. Pistachio Industry Conference shared ideas during various social events like the WPA Annual Golf Classic with 120 golfers registered. The Welcome Reception gave away free WPA umbrellas with the hope that they would receive abundant use over the next year! Exhibit booths served as a backdrop for the various events with more opportunities to dialogue with industry members. An elegant Gala Dinner at The Biltmore Four Seasons Resort highlighted with sunset cocktails overlooking the California coastline and dinner featuring a pistachio encrusted chicken entrée, and lively dancing were the ingredients for a magical evening. In a crop update, the 2008 pistachio production indicated California crop deliveries totaling nearly 278 million pounds. Additionally, it is estimated that the state of Arizona produced approximately 5.5 million pounds. 2008 was considered an “off-year” for pistachio production, while 2009 is expected to be an “on year” with production higher forecasts. The pistachio industry anticipates continued production growth as pistachio acreage increases. The Administrative Committee for Pistachios (ACP) reported the total California acreage at the end of the 2007/08 crop year (August 31) to be 196,288 acres, an increase of 11percent over the previous year. Of that total, approximately 118,133 acres are considered “bearing” (trees older than 7 years), with a large number of non-bearing acres estimated at 78,155 acres or 40 percent. The pace for new acreage being planted has slowed a bit from the record 2007 rate of nearly 25,000 acres, but 2008 plantings of 18,740 acres still represents the second largest new plantings in the history of U. S. pistachio production.
Sources: California Agricultural Statistics Service, California Pistachio Commission and Administrative Committee for Pistachios Producer Deliver Reports and Acreage Surveys
Gala Welcome
Reception
The Western
Pistachio Association
is trade association
representing U.S.
pistachio growers.
The Fresno,
California based
organization has
over 400 members
representing
pistachio production
in the states of
California, Arizona
and New Mexico.
These states
represent nearly
100 percent of the
domestic pistachio
production.
Pictured at left (from left to right): Tim Quinn, Michael Jackson, Jerry Johns, Huell Howser.
Pictured at right (from left to right): US Senator Barbara Boxer and Soumen Bagchi, Consul, Economic and Political, Consulate General of India
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Photo: Nut for Life
80 The Cracker • April 2009
26 The CraCker • SepTember 2005
Berlin Congress SeriesWe are not allowed to over – expand the EU. It has
naturally and historically – based frontiers. Countries that want to become members of the EU must meet with strict admission criteria stated clearly in the Copenhagen resolu‑tion in 1993. It is unmistakeabley stated that human and civil rights and the religious freedom must be unrestricted in a country. That is valid for Turkey as well with whom the European Commission has recommended to begin entry negotiations.
According to the Copenhagen Resolutions, the fulfil‑ment of the criteria will be seriously checked without any manipulation. Part of the manipulation now is the pressure of time that makes a profound check impossible. A serious check needs plenty of time.
It is cynical and condemnable politics approach to the Turkey question: “When the accession happens, I am not in the office any more.” In this context, it is important that each country has one vote. In an expanded EU it must be given that there is no contest of the big states against the smaller ones. There needs to be an equality between deci‑sion makers. That is even more important as two‑thirds of the 25 member states only have 10 or less than 10 million inhabitants. The importance of a member state is not only to be judged by its inhabitants. Mitterand and I always argued that: the criteria of quality is much more important.
former Chancellor Dr. Helmut Kohl
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With the expansion of the EU, the shell of the House is completed. Now the House of Europe is weather‑proof. The interior construction needs to be accelerated. This interior construction is the competition of the political Union. There are two important challenges: one is the long term task to strengthen the acceptance of Europe with its people. The people expect successes in the interior security. Cooperation within the member states is crucial. Secondly, it is important that we reach a common agreement about foreign politics. Europe needs to learn to speak with one voice.
It is essential that the EU continues its close transatlantic partnership with the USA.
For Germans there is no either/or between the Transatlantic partnership and European Unification. On the contrary there are both. This partnership is founded on a wide base of shared values: democracy, human rights, and individual freedom. This partnership is also founded on close economic relations. Germany is the third biggest foreign investor and the third biggest foreign employer in the US. In addition, Germany is the biggest European trading partner and the fifth biggest trading partner of the US. The EU with its 25 members has become the strongest economic power next to the US. Economically, but also politically it is given: Europe needs America, and America needs Europe. The overall balance of the European Unification is extraordinarily positive: The EU brought its member countries peace, freedom and prosperity during the last 25 years. We have every reason to continue building the House of Europe with optimism and passion. The future is in a cosmopolitan world and a unified Europe.
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April 2009 • The Cracker 81
GEN Y
Nut rition Research Update
GEN Y HAS REASON TO LIKE NUTS AND DRIED FRUITS
For nut and dried fruit marketers interested in targeting younger consumers and restaurant operators, consideration should be given to attracting Generation Y (born between 1980 and 2000). These young people are extremely into health and wellness, customization and global flavors. But this generation is so complex -- perhaps the most savvy, brand-sensitive consumer group in history -- that understanding the nuances of how they tick is a must, according to the new “How Gen Y Eats Culinary Trend Mapping Report” from the Center for Culinary Development (CCD) and Packaged Facts. To get a handle on what drives Gen Y’s food preferences, CCD conducted a quantitative online attitude and behavior study and customized focus-group sessions held in living room and restaurant sessions. The results point to several key attitudes, starting with their penchant for eating and socializing in casual, communal spaces. Gen Y’s love hanging out at communal tables in bar lounges, college dining halls and other informal settings. Dining venues that offer a wide collection of foods, particularly with “far-flung global inspiration,” are favorites. When they eat alone, they often “scarf solo in the car or on the sofa,” adds CCD. Gen Y is wired to the max. These young people are not only hooked on socializing in communities on the Web; they see even eating as “a deeply wired activity.” Their markedly social self-identities and need to be constantly entertained drive them to use networking technologies in food-centric ways, “from downloading menus and placing orders to subscribing to wireless recipe and ordering information services,” notes CCD. College campuses are the “incubators” of this melding of technology and community. They are also thrill-seekers who crave heightened eating experiences such as intense flavors and extreme textures. “The typical Gen Y eater likes unusual food forms, flavor profiles tweaked with unexpected or dramatic twists and of course, vivid global cuisines, especially when they blend fresh and spicy,” the researchers stress. Other drivers include their penchant for customizing foods through adds-ons or mix-ins (the reason they love fajitas and other “build-it-yourself” foods); their dedication to local, organic, fair trade and vegetarian/vegan foods (reflecting their belief that food choices can make a positive difference in the world at large); and their firm belief in the value of health/wellness and functional (including anti-aging) foods. Marketers have opportunities in emerging markets for “all-natural” weight-control foods like nuts that help “balance [their] drive-through lifestyles,” as well as in anti-aging foods and protein-rich breakfast and snack foods, according to CCD. Foods and beverages in hip, eco packaging that offer innovative tastes and functionality are irresistibly “kewl” to Gen Y, they add. Critically, marketing messages must come across as “anything but marketing messages,” stress the researchers. This generation wants food and drinks that they can feel “they’ve stumbled onto themselves or through a peer recommendation, and with more than a whiff of cultish appeal,” CCD concludes. While Gen Y’s are far from brand-phobic, “the brands have to be the right ones, without the taint of the hard sell.”
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82 The Cracker • April 2009
EUROPEAN HEART HEALTH MARKET DEMAND UP
The European heart health ingredients market is set for growth despite a climate of regulatory uncertainty, according to market research conducted by Frost & Sullivan, which valued the market at €421m in 2007 and growing at 20 per cent. A driving factor is consumers who are increasingly aware of heart-related problems and seeking to maintain their heart health via dietary and lifestyle choices rather than deal with the exorbitant costs of the health care system. This bodes well for nuts. This awareness has been driven by government and commercial education campaigns and assisted by the approval of some health claims in some countries, although European Union health claim regulations are yet to be resolved and this was acting as a curtailing force on market expansion. “The primary challenge facing the heart health ingredients market continues to be the stringent regulatory scenario in Europe as compared to the US,” the report states. With an ageing population seeing heart disease rates continuing to soar, there is “immense potential for growth”, the report, which looks back to 2004 and forward to 2014, states. Over-60s are expected to increase from 20 to 25 per cent of the European population by 2020. According to the European Heart Network cardiovascular disease (CVD) cost €192 billion in health care costs across the 27-member state EU in 2007. While CVD can be sub-classified into categories such as hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, heart attack and stroke, the Frost research focuses on cholesterol reduction because functional ingredient solutions are most advanced in this area. Frost points out that in Europe four ingredients dominate the cholesterol-reduction scene: phytosterols; omega-3s; beta-glucan and soy protein. Nuts are high in the first two. Other scientifically backed options included fibre, antioxidants, green tea, CoEnzymeQ10, folic acid, B12 and selenium(high in Brazil nuts), but the big four had achieved greater popularity because of their “gold standard” scientific grounding. Phytosterols were the most heart health targeted and benefited from approved health claims in many markets. In Europe, five million people suffer heart failure with about 860,000 new cases each year.
NUT ALLERGY FEARS BECOMING HYSTERICAL?
Fears over the dangers of peanut allergy, a potentially deadly allergy for certain people, are becoming sensationalist and hysterical, according to a Harvard professor. A level-headed approach is needed before the situation spirals out of control, wrote Professor Nicolas Christakis from Harvard Medical School in the British Medical Journal.
The food industry is already bound by certain regulations, depending on the country, to highlight possible allergens in a food product, such as the EU’s Labelling Directive 2000/13/EC. But Prof Christakis said that such an approach, however well intentioned, may actually “fan the flames, since they signal to parents that nuts are a clear and present danger. “This encourages more parents to worry, which fuels the epidemic. It also encourages more parents to have their children tested, thus detecting mild and meaningless ‘allergies’ to nuts. And this encourages still more avoidance of nuts, leading to still more sensitisation. “The cycle of increasing anxiety, draconian measures, and an increasing prevalence of nut allergies must be broken,” he said. Peanut allergies are rising in humans, with an estimated 2.5 million people in Europe and the US now vulnerable to the food allergy. There is no current cure for food allergy and vigilance by an allergic individual is the only way to prevent a reaction but a peanut allergy can be so severe that only very tiny amounts can be enough to trigger a response. Current recommendations in many countries, such as the UK and the US, for would-be mothers are to avoid peanuts during pregnancy, breastfeeding, and infancy. However, a recent study comparing incidence of peanut allergy in Jewish children in the UK and Israel (where no such recommendations exist) showed that children in the UK were 10 times more likely to suffer from peanut allergy than their Israeli counterparts. Findings in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology showed that 69 per cent of Israeli children were consuming peanut, while only ten per cent of the children in the UK were eating peanuts. “Measures to control nuts are instead making things worse in a cycle of over-reaction and increasing sensitisation,” said Prof Christakis. One example cited in the BMJ article involved the evacuation and decontamination pf a school bus in the US following discovery of one peanut on the floor. The school bus was full of ten year olds, who could arguably have been told simply to not eat food off the floor. The “gross over-reaction to the magnitude of the threat” is very similar to mass psychogenic illness (MPI), said Prof Christakis, previously known as epidemic hysteria. Outbreaks of MPI involve healthy people in a flow of anxiety, most often triggered by a fear of contamination, he said. Being around individuals who are anxious heightens others’ anxiety. In attempt to add perspective, the Harvard professor notes that 150 people die each year from food allergies in the US. On the other hand, 100 people die from lightening strikes, 45,000 die in automobile accidents, and 10,000 are hospitalised for traumatic brain injury from playing sport.
April 2009 • The Cracker 83
According to new findings published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, “the term portion size is not associated with ‘an appropriate amount to eat’ in the mind of the consumer”. With obesity levels on the increase globally, many initiatives to curb the rise have focussed on reducing the amount people eat. Indeed, the UK’s Food Standards Agency (FSA) has focussed on the topic and convened a workshop last year on the topic. The workshop followed a report that some products sold in the UK may have increased in size over the last 15-20 years. The Food Standards Agency’s focus on portion sizes is part of a programme of work in collaboration with the food industry on reformulation and other efforts to help people achieve a balanced diet. But “information about portion size was not found to be a good tool to manipulate food-intake behaviour in this study. In addition, consumers’ interpretation of portion size was associated more with objective information about food than with the amount that would be appropriate to eat,” wrote lead author Oydis Ueland from Nofima Food in Norway. “Implications are that consumers would benefit from a better understanding of actual macronutrient and caloric content of specific foods and diets,” added the authors. Some confusion appears to surround the term, said Ueland and his co-workers, since it is used differently by food manufacturers, regulatory agencies, and consumers. The researchers note that serving sizes used for US federal food-intake recommendations are the amounts for optimal nutrition, while the food industry defined the amount as ‘customarily consumed per eating occasion’. Further confusion arises from the industry’s use of phrases such as ‘super-size’ and ‘healthy portion’, said the researchers. In order to understand how consumers interpret the term, the researchers recruited 33 normal weight people, and randomised them to different lunch meals. The participants were served a lunch meal consisting of a set amount of pasta, described as 0.5, 1, or 1.5 portions, and then followed by ad libitum servings of the same pasta.The researchers found that information about the portion size had no impact on measures of fullness or on how much participants ate altogether. Indeed, a questionnaire found that the participants viewed the term ‘portion size’ to be a “standardised index of the nutritional content of a food/meal, rather than as an index by which to estimate personal food intake”, wrote Ueland. “Nutritional advisors should provide specific, objective information about portion sizes (eg, gram weights) when advising consumers, because the term portion size is not associated with ‘an appropriate amount to eat’ in the mind of the consumer,” concluded the researchers.
‘PORTION SIZE’ MAY NOT BE WAY TO CURB OBESITY
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84 The Cracker • April 2009
MED DIET BEST FOR BLOOD SUGAR CONTROL
Another study finds type 2 diabetes increases cancer death riskA new study found that a diet of “low-glycemic foods” -- such as beans, nuts, peas, lentils and pasta -- was superior to a high-cereal-fiber diet when it comes to lowering blood sugar and other risk factors for heart disease in people with diabetes. “These findings fit with the general tenor of what’s gone before. The trouble is that those studies tended to be considerably smaller and for shorter periods of time, and they didn’t always show the effects significantly,” said study author Dr. David J.A. Jenkins, Canada research chair in nutrition and metabolism at the University of Toronto and St. Michael’s Hospital in Canada. “I think this certainly supports a recommendation to people that this is an extra tool in the tool kit.” “This reemphasizes what we know -- at the end of the day, the best diet is the Mediterranean-type diet: nuts, beans, lentils, fruits, vegetables,” said Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, director of Women and Heart Disease at Lenox Hill Hospital
in New York City, and a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association. “The study didn’t exactly call it a Mediterranean diet, but the components of it were
Mediterranean.” A second study found that people who have type 2 diabetes
when they are diagnosed with cancer face a greater risk of death compared to cancer patients without diabetes. Both papers were published in the Dec. 17 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The diabetes epidemic now affects some 20 million people in the United States alone, a staggering 7 percent of the
population. The condition increases the risk for heart disease, cancer and other health problems. Although many drugs are available to control blood sugar levels, the evidence on how well they reduce the risk of cardiovascular problems isn’t entirely clear. This makes a proper diet crucial to help control the disease. For the new study, researchers at St. Michael’s Hospital and the University of Toronto in Canada randomly selected more than 200 people with type 2 diabetes to follow either a high-cereal-fiber or a low-glycemic-index diet for six months. All the participants were already taking blood-sugar-lowering medications. Carbohydrates in a low-glycemic-index diet are absorbed through the small intestine and converted to blood sugar at a slower rate than higher glycemic foods, meaning blood sugar is more stable, the researchers said. Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels, a longer-term measure of blood sugar levels, decreased by 0.5 percent in people on the low-glycemic-index diet, compared with a decrease of 0.18 percent in the alternate group. Those in the low-glycemic group also saw an increase in their high-density lipoprotein (HDL or “good”) cholesterol of 1.7 mg/dL, compared to an HDL decrease of 0.2 mg/dL in the high-cereal-fiber group. Although the reduction in HbA1c levels was small, the study authors speculated that, based on previous studies, this might result in a 10 percent to 12 percent reduction in cardiovascular complications. For the second paper in the journal, researchers at the Johns Hopkins University pooled data from 23 completed studies and found that people with diabetes were 41 percent more likely to die of cancer than people who did not have diabetes. Specifically, there was a 76 percent increase in the risk of death from endometrial cancer, a 61 percent increase for breast cancer, and a 32 percent increase for colorectal cancer. The researchers said possible explanations range from an insulin environment that contributes to tumor cell proliferation, to less-rigorous screening practices, to complications from diabetes factoring into cancer treatment decisions.
April 2009 • The Cracker 85
Here’s a health tip in a nutshell: Eating a handful of nuts a day for a year — along with a Mediterranean diet rich in fruit, vegetables and fish — may help undo a collection of risk factors for heart disease. Spanish researchers found that adding nuts worked better than boosting the olive oil in a typical Mediterranean diet. Both regimens cut the heart risks known as metabolic syndrome in more people than a low-fat diet did. “What’s most surprising is they found substantial metabolic benefits in the absence of calorie reduction or weight loss,” said Dr. JoAnn Manson, chief of preventive medicine at Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital. In the study, appearing in the Archives of Internal Medicine, the people who improved most were told to eat about three whole walnuts, seven or eight whole hazelnuts and seven or eight whole almonds. They didn’t lose weight,
on average, but more of them succeeded in reducing belly fat and improving their cholesterol and blood pressure. Manson, who wasn’t involved in the study, cautioned that adding nuts to a Western diet — one packed with too many calories and junk food — could lead to weight gain and more health risks. “But using nuts to replace a snack of chips or crackers is a very favorable change to make in your diet,” Manson said. The American Heart Association says 50 million Americans have metabolic syndrome, a combination of health risks, such as high blood pressure and abdominal obesity. Finding a way to reverse it with a diet people find easy and satisfying would mean huge health improvements for many Americans, Manson said. Nuts help people feel full while also increasing the body’s ability to burn fat, said lead author Dr. Jordi Salas-Salvado of the University of Rovira i Virgili in Reus, Spain. “Nuts could have an effect on metabolic syndrome by multiple mechanisms,” Salas-Salvado said. Nuts are rich in anti-inflammatory substances, such as fiber, and
antioxidants, such as vitamin E. They are high in unsaturated fat, a healthier fat known to lower blood triglycerides and increase good cholesterol. More than 1,200 Spaniards, ranging in age from 55 to 80, were randomly assigned to follow one of three diets. They were followed for a year. The participants had no prior history of heart disease, but some had risk factors including Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and abdominal obesity. At the start, 751 people had metabolic syndrome, about 61 percent, distributed evenly among the three groups. Metabolic syndrome was defined as having three or more of the following conditions: abdominal obesity, high triglycerides, low levels of good cholesterol (HDL), high blood sugar and high blood pressure. The low-fat group was given basic advice about reducing all fat in their diets. Another group ate a Mediterranean diet with extra nuts. The third group ate a Mediterranean diet and was told to make sure they ate more than four tablespoons of olive oil a day. Dietitians advised the two groups on the Mediterranean diet to use olive oil for cooking; increase fruit, vegetable and fish consumption; eat white meat instead of beef or processed meat; and prepare homemade tomato sauce with garlic, onions and herbs. Drinkers were told to stick with red wine. After one year, all three groups had fewer people with metabolic syndrome, but the group eating nuts led the improvement, now with 52 percent having those heart risk factors. In the olive oil group, 57 percent had the syndrome. In the low-fatgroup, there was very little difference after a year in the percentage of people with the syndrome. The nut-rich diet didn’t do much to improve high blood sugar, but the large number of people with Type 2 diabetes — about 46 percent of participants — could be the reason, Salas-Salvado said. It’s difficult to get diabetics’ blood sugar down with lifestyle changes alone, he said. The study was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Health and the government of Valencia, Spain.
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