- The majority of Nestlé's traditional food and drinks do not meet a "recognised definition of
health ." - Just 37% of its consumer food and beverage products meet international health standards.
- The global food company acknowledged the issue in an internal presentation seen by the
Financial Times .
More than 60% of Nestlé's traditional packaged consumer food and beverage products do not meet an internationally recognized health standard, according to internal company documents seen by the Financial Times.
"Some of our categories and products will never be 'healthy' no matter how much we renovate," the company said in a presentation seen by top executives at the world's largest food conglomerate.
CEO Mark Schneider told Bloomberg in September that the company is making continued investments in the healthiness of its products, but "confectionary and chocolate address a deep human need and are going to be here to stay."
The definition of "healthy" comes from the Australian health star rating system, which scores products on a five-star scale and is used by international researchers including the Access to
Metrics like the health star system "enable consumers to make informed choices. However, they don't capture everything," a company spokesperson said in a statement to Insider. "About half of our sales are not covered by these systems. That includes categories such as infant nutrition, specialized health products and pet food, which follow regulated nutrition standards."
"We believe that a healthy diet means finding a balance between well-being and enjoyment. This includes having some space for indulgent foods, consumed in moderation," the spokesperson added.
The presentation highlighted the stats of some of the most unhealthy products made and sold by Nestlé-owned brands.
A serving of Hot Pockets pepperoni pizza packs a whopping 48 percent of the daily sodium allowance, followed closely by DiGiorno's three meat croissant crust pizza, which has 40 percent. To pair saltiness with sweetness, Nestlé also offers an orange-flavored San Pellegrino drink with 7.1g of
"Strawberry Nesquik is perfect at breakfast to get kids ready for the day," Nestlé says in its marketing text for the product.
"We have made significant improvements to our products ... [but] our portfolio still underperforms against external definitions of health in a landscape where regulatory pressure and consumer demands are skyrocketing," the presentation said.
Professor Marion
"Food companies' job is to generate money for stockholders, and to generate it as quickly and in as large an amount as possible," she said. "They are going to sell products that reach a mass audience and are bought by as many people as possible, that people want to buy, and that's junk food."
"Nestlé is a very smart company, at least from my meetings with people who are in their science [departments] ... but they have a real problem," she added. "Scientists have been working for years to try to figure out how to reduce the