2013 Fonterra recall

In 2013, a wide-scale recall of products sold by dairy producer Fonterra was announced after suspected botulism-causing bacteria were found during safety tests. The contaminated whey products had been sold to third parties who use it to produce infant formula and sports drinks. Approximately 1,000 tonnes of consumer product was affected by the recall across seven countries, but no cases of sickened consumers were reported. China, which imports most of its powdered milk from New Zealand, instituted a temporary ban on the import of the ingredient from New Zealand.

The scandal resulted in the resignation of Fonterra's head of its milk business division, Gary Romano.[1]

The bacteria were ultimately found not to be a botulism-causing strain.[2]

  1. ^ Gyles Beckford (14 August 2013). "Fonterra's milk products chief resigns after botulism scare". Reuters.
  2. ^ Grey, Jamie (28 August 2013). "Fonterra botulism crisis was false alarm". The New Zealand Herald.