Summary:
www.cjly.net/deconstructingdinner/071708.htm
The Packaged Foods Exposed series takes a look at the largest food manufacturers in the world. What products
fall under their banners; how has their influence shaped economic policy, society and culture; how have they
affected the environments they operate in; and what relationships do they foster within the countries they are
located?
This series places corporations in a critical light, hoping to provide a more balanced
image to the advertising and PR campaigns launched by some of the most influential food corporations on the planet.
In this fourth episode of the Packaged Foods Exposed series, we take a look at one
of the largest consumer products companies in the world - Unilever.
With such a significant influence on agriculture, food and health here in Canada and abroad, this
focus on the company will be spread out over a two-part series.
Part II
On Part II of the Unilever series we explore the historical and current health impacts of margarine
and how Unilever has responded to such health concerns.
Unilever has a long history of impacting life in the oceans. Most recently, they have been accused of having
a significant contribution on the depletion of cod stocks in the Baltic Sea - stocks that are on the brink of
collapse.
Unilever also controls roughly 25% of the Canadian ice cream market. This broadcast will look into some
similar tactics the company has used in the world of margarine that are quietly being applied to many of the
company's ice cream products. The question is raised - are Unilever's ice creams really ice cream? We will learn
of a misleading web site the company maintains that seemingly violates Canadian laws, and we will learn of a
controversial ingredient entering into Unilever's ice cream products
around the world, an ingredient that replicates the DNA found in a fish, and one that is created through genetic modification!
Guests
Oliver Knowles - Oceans Campaigner, Greenpeace
(London, UK) - The over-exploitation and mismanagement of fisheries has already led to some spectacular
fisheries collapses. The cod fishery off Newfoundland, Canada collapsed in 1992, leading to the loss of some
40,000 jobs in the industry. The cod stocks in the North Sea and Baltic Sea are now heading the same way and
are close to complete collapse. Greenpeace has been at the forefront of addressing this serious concern.
Geoff Ross-Smith - Owner, Kootenay Kreamery (Nelson, BC) - Geoff began selling Unilever's
Breyers ice cream at a stand in Ainsworth, BC until the quality of the product declined rapidly. Geoff chose to then
launch a small independent ice cream company - now selling his products to 10 stores in the area.
Therese Beaulieu - Assistant Director, Communication and Policy,
Dairy Farmers of Canada (Ottawa, ON) - A national policy, lobbying and promotional organization
representing Canadaïs 16,000 dairy farms. DFC strives to create favourable conditions for the Canadian dairy
industry, today and in the future. It works to maintain policies that foster the viability of Canadian dairy
producers and promote dairy products and their health benefits.
Joe Cummins - Professor Emeritus of Genetics, University of Western Ontario
(London, ON) - Joe is one of the earliest critics of genetic engineering. He obtained BS Horticulture,
Washington State University 1955 and PhD Cellular Biology, University of Wisconsin 1962. Taught genetics at Rutgers
and the University of Washington, Seattle before joining the University of Western Ontario in 1972. Joe sits on the
board of the UK-based Independent Science Panel and is involved with The Institute of Science in Society.
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