New
York is set to become the first city in the US to ban all but tiny
quantities of trans fats from being used in its 24,000 restaurants.
According to plans agreed this week by the board of health, under the
mayor, Michael Bloomberg, all the city's restaurants, cafes and street
stalls will be forced to keep to a limit of half a gram of trans fats
in any item served from their menus.
The move will see a sharp drop in use of the treated fats. One serving of chips contains up to eight grams.
Trans
fats have been the subject of mounting concern among health experts who
warn that the fats could contribute to heart disease by raising blood
cholesterol levels. In a process known as hydrogenation the fats are
formed by subjecting oils to high temperatures, which stabilises and
solidifies them and makes them last longer. They are used in the baking
of cakes, doughnuts and bread, and for deep frying.
Health
campaigners say the fats have no nutritional value and can raise the
risk of heart disease, a condition that kills 18,000 New Yorkers under
the age of 65 each year.
The city's board of health has set a
deadline in December for consultation. Restaurants will then have until
July to prepare and switch to oils or margarine with less than half a
gram per serving. The health board said the move would be "cost
neutral" as alternatives could be bought at the same price.
The
issue of trans fats is particularly sensitive in New York, which has by
far the greatest density of food outlets of any US city, about half of
which still use trans fats. New Yorkers tend to eat out or have
takeaways more regularly than most Americans. But the city also prides
itself as being the nation's "thought-leader" on health issues: it was
the first to ban lead in paint (in 1960), and its lauded smoking ban in
restaurants three years ago has been widely copied throughout the US.
The
action against trans fats was, however, condemned by the New York State
Restaurant Association, which represents 3,500 city restaurants. The
group's vice president, Charles Hunt, said that compared with smoking,
which made other people passive victims, this was an issue entirely of
personal choice. He said: "You chose what you eat and that only affects
you. We don't think it's appropriate for a non-elected body such as the
health board to make a decision that will have a big effect on
restaurants across New York City."
Denmark is the only country so
far to have moved against trans fats. Chicago has floated the idea of
restrictions but these would apply only to large food chains with
annual sales worth more than $20m. Recently the city authorities
indicated they were minded just to opt for voluntary measures.
New
York has tried a year-long educational drive to persuade outlets to
shift voluntarily from trans fats, but the board of health concluded
the campaign had minimal impact. Some big US food chains, including
Starbucks and Wendy's, have indicated they will restrict trans fats.