Everything about Trans-fat totally explained
Trans fat is the common name for a type of
unsaturated fat with
trans-
isomer fatty acid(s). Trans fats may be
monounsaturated or
polyunsaturated.
Most trans fats consumed today are industrially created by partially
hydrogenating plant oils — a process developed in the early 1900s and first commercialized as
Crisco in 1911. The goal of partial
hydrogenation is to add hydrogen atoms to unsaturated fats, making them more
saturated. These more saturated fats have a higher
melting point, which makes them attractive for baking and extends their
shelf-life. Another particular class of trans fats,
vaccenic acid, occurs naturally in trace amounts in meat and dairy products from
ruminants.
Unlike other dietary fats, trans fats are neither essential nor and, in fact, the consumption of trans fats increases one's risk of
coronary heart disease
by raising levels of "bad"
LDL cholesterol and lowering levels of "good"
HDL cholesterol.
Health authorities worldwide recommend that consumption of trans fat be reduced to trace amounts. Trans fats from partially hydrogenated oils are more deleterious than naturally occurring oils.
Chemically, trans fats are made of the same building blocks as non-trans fats, but have a different arrangement. In trans fatty acid molecules, the hydrogen atoms bonded to pairs of doubly bonded carbon
atoms (characteristic of all unsaturated fats) are in the
trans rather than the
cis arrangement. This results in a straight, rather than kinked, shape for the carbon chain, more like the straight chain of a fully saturated fat.
History
Nobel laureate
Paul Sabatier worked in the 1890s to develop the chemistry of hydrogenation which enabled the
margarine, oil hydrogenation, and synthetic
methanol industries. While Sabatier only considered hydrogenation of vapours, the
German chemist Wilhelm Normann showed in
1901 that liquid oils could be hydrogenated, and
patented the process in 1902.
During the years
1905 -
1910 Normann built a fat hardening facility in the
Herford company. At the same time the invention was extended to a large scale plant in
Warrington,
England at
Joseph Crosfield & Sons, Limited. It took only two years until the hardened fat could be successfully produced in the plant in Warrington, commencing production in the autumn of
1909. The initial year's production was nearly 3000 tonnes.
In 1909,
Procter & Gamble acquired the US rights to the Normann patent;
in 1911, they began marketing the first hydrogenated
shortening,
Crisco (composed largely of partially hydrogenated
cottonseed oil). Further success came from the marketing technique of giving away free cookbooks in which every recipe called for Crisco.
Normann's hydrogenation process made it possible to stabilize affordable
whale oil or
fish oil for human consumption, a practice kept secret to avoid consumer distaste.
Production of hydrogenated fats increased steadily until the 1960s as processed vegetable fats replaced animal fats in the US and other western countries. At first, the argument was a financial one due to lower costs; however, advocates also said that the unsaturated trans fats of margarine were healthier than the
saturated fats of butter.
There were suggestions in the scientific literature as early as 1988 that trans fats could be a cause of the large increase in coronary artery disease. In 1994, it was estimated that trans fats caused 30,000 deaths annually in the US from heart disease.
In January 2007, faced with the prospect of an outright ban on the sale of their product, Crisco was reformulated to meet the US
FDA definition of "zero grams trans fats per serving" (that is less than one gram per tablespoon) by boosting the saturation and then cutting the resulting solid with oils. Meanwhile, at the
University of Guelph,
Alejandro Marangoni's research group found a way to mix oil, water, monoglycerides and fatty acids to form a "cooking fat" that acts the same way as trans and saturated fats — the stuff that makes baked goods taste so good. The big difference here's Marangoni's process works with "healthier" oils like olive, soybean and canola. He's hoping to get food manufacturers interested in the process this year, as the pressure mounts on the makers of commercial foods to dump trans fats.
Chemistry
Chemically,
fats are large molecules consisting of three
fatty acid groups connected to a single
glycerol derivative. The term
trans fat generally refers to a fat that contains one or more
trans fatty acid groups. Fatty acid molecules are essentially long-chain
hydrocarbons with a terminal
carboxyl group. Fatty acids are characterized as
saturated or
unsaturated based on the number of
hydrogen atoms in the acid. If the molecule contains the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms, it's said to be saturated; otherwise, it's unsaturated to some degree.
Carbon atoms are
tetravalent, forming four
covalent bonds with other atoms, while hydrogen atoms bond with only one other atom. In saturated fatty acids, each carbon atom is connected to its two neighbour carbon atoms as well as two hydrogen atoms (see structure diagram, below). In unsaturated fatty acids the carbon atoms that are missing a hydrogen atom are joined by
double bonds rather than single bonds (see structure graphic below) so that each carbon atom participates in four bonds.
Hydrogenation of an unsaturated fatty acid refers to the addition of hydrogen atoms to the acid, causing
double bonds to become single ones as carbon atoms acquire new hydrogen partners (to maintain four bonds per carbon atom). Full hydrogenation results in a molecule containing the maximum amount of hydrogen (in other words the conversion of an unsaturated fatty acid into a saturated one). Partial hydrogenation results in the addition of hydrogen atoms at some of the empty positions, with a corresponding reduction in the number of double bonds. Commercial hydrogenation is typically partial in order to obtain a
malleable fat that's
solid at
room temperature, but melts upon baking (or consumption).
In most naturally occurring unsaturated fatty acids, the hydrogen atoms are on the same side of the double bonds of the carbon chain (
cis configuration — meaning "on the same side" in Latin). However, partial hydrogenation reconfigures most of the double bonds that don't become chemically saturated, twisting them so that the hydrogen atoms end up on different sides of the chain. This type of configuration is called
trans, which means "across" in Latin. The trans conformation is the lower energy form, and is favored in the hydrogenation process.
| Diagram of the molecular structure of different fatty acids |
| Saturated fat |
Cis-unsaturated fatty acid |
Trans-unsaturated fatty acid |
|
|
|
| saturated carbon atoms (each with 2 hydrogens) joined by a single bond |
unsaturated carbon atoms (each with 1 hydrogen) joined by a double bond. Cis configuration. |
unsaturated carbon atoms (each with 1 hydrogen) joined by a double bond. Trans configuration. |
The same molecule, containing the same number of atoms, with a double bond in the same location, can be either a
trans or a
cis fatty acid depending on the conformation of the double bond. For example,
oleic acid and
elaidic acid are both unsaturated fatty acids with the
chemical formula C
9H
17C
9H
17O
2. It is notably a solid at human body temperatures.
In food production, the goal isn't to simply change the configuration of double bonds while maintaining the same ratios of hydrogen to carbon. Instead, the goal is to decrease the number of double bonds and increase the amount of hydrogen in the fatty acid. This changes the consistency of the fatty acid and makes it less prone to
rancidity (in which
free radicals attack double bonds). Production of trans fatty acids is therefore a side-effect of partial hydrogenation.
Researchers at the
United States Department of Agriculture have investigated whether hydrogenation can be achieved without the side effect of trans fat production. They varied the
pressure under which the chemical reaction was conducted — applying 1400
kPa (200
psi) of pressure to soybean oil in a 2 litre vessel while heating it to between 140 °C and 170 °C. The standard 140 kPa (20 psi) process of hydrogenation produces a product of about 40% trans fatty acid by weight, compared to about 17% using the high pressure method. Blended with unhydrogenated liquid soybean oil, the high pressure processed oil produced margarine containing 5 to 6% trans fat. Based on current U.S. labelling requirements (see below) the manufacturer could claim the product was free of trans fat. The level of trans fat may also be altered by modification of the temperature and the length of time during hydrogenation.
Trans fat levels may be measured. Measurement techniques include
chromatography (by
silver ion chromatography on
thin layer chromatography plates, or small
high performance liquid chromatography columns of
silica gel with bonded phenylsulfonic acid groups whose hydrogen atoms have been exchanged for
silver ions). The role of silver lies in its ability to form complexes with unsaturated compounds.
Gas chromatography and mid-
infrared spectroscopy are other methods in use.
Presence in food
A type of trans fat occurs naturally in the milk and body fat of
ruminants (such as
cattle and
sheep) at a level of 2–5% of total fat. Natural trans fats, which include
conjugated linoleic acid and
vaccenic acid, originate in the
rumen of these animals.
Animal-based fats were once the only trans fats consumed, but by far the largest amount of trans fat consumed today is created by the processed food industry as a side-effect of partially hydrogenating unsaturated plant fats (generally vegetable oils). These partially hydrogenated fats have displaced natural solid fats and liquid oils in many areas, notably in the fast food,
snack food, fried food and baked good industries.
Partially hydrogenated oils have been used in food for many reasons. Partial hydrogenation increases product
shelf life and decreases refrigeration requirements. Because baking often requires semi-solid fats to suspend solids at room temperature, partially hydrogenated oils can replace the animal fats traditionally used by bakers (such as
butter and
lard). They are also an inexpensive alternative to other semi-solid oils such as
palm oil. Because partially hydrogenated plant oils can replace animal fats, the resulting products can be consumed (barring other ingredient and preparation violations) by adherents to
Kashrut (kosher) and
Halal, as well as by adherents to
vegetarianism in Buddhism,
ahimsa in
Jainism and
Hinduism,
veganism, and other forms of
vegetarianism.
Foods containing artificial trans fats formed by partially hydrogenating plant fats may contain up to 45% trans fat compared to their total fat.
It has been established that trans fats in
human milk fluctuate with maternal consumption of trans fat, and that the amount of trans fats in the bloodstream of breastfed infants fluctuates with the amounts found in their milk. Reported percentages of trans fats (compared to total fats) in human milk range from 1% in Spain, 2% in France, 4% in Germany, and 7% in Canada.
Trans fats are also found in shortenings commonly used for deep frying in restaurants. In the past, the decreased rancidity of partially hydrogenated oils meant that they could be reused for a longer time than conventional oils. Recently, however, non-hydrogenated vegetable oils have become available that have lifespans exceeding that of the frying shortenings. As fast food chains routinely use different fats in different locations, trans fat levels in products can have large variation. For example, an analysis of samples of
McDonald's french fries collected in 2004 and 2005 found that fries served in
New York City contained twice as much trans fat as in
Hungary, and 28 times as much trans fat as in
Denmark (where trans fats are restricted). At KFC, the pattern was reversed with Hungary's product containing twice the trans fat of the New York product. Even within the US there was variation, with fries in New York containing 30% more trans fat than those from
Atlanta.
Nutritional guidelines
The
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) advises the United States and Canadian governments on nutritional science for use in Public policy and product labeling programs. Their 2002
Dietary reference intakes for Energy, Carbohydrate, Fiber, Fat, Fatty Acids, Cholesterol, Protein, and Amino Acids contains their findings and recommendations regarding consumption of trans fat (
summary
).
Their recommendations are based on two key facts. First, "trans fatty acids are not essential and provide no known benefit to human health", Second, while both saturated and trans fats increase levels of
LDL cholesterol (so-called bad cholesterol), trans fats also lower levels of
HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol); Like the NAS, the
World Health Organization has tried to balance public health goals with a practical level of trans fat consumption, recommending in 2003 that trans fats be limited to less than 1% of overall energy intake. While a recent scientific review agrees with the conclusion (stating that "the sum of the current evidence suggests that the Public health implications of consuming trans fats from ruminant products are relatively limited") it cautions that this may be due to the relatively low consumption of trans fats from animal sources compared to artificial ones. A comprehensive review of studies of trans fats was published in 2006 in the
New England Journal of Medicine reports a strong and reliable connection between trans fat consumption and CHD, concluding that "On a per-calorie basis, trans fats appear to increase the risk of CHD more than any other macronutrient, conferring a substantially increased risk at low levels of consumption (1 to 3 percent of total energy intake)".
The major evidence for the effect of trans fat on CHD comes from the
Nurses' Health Study (NHS) — a
cohort study that has been following 120,000 female nurses since its inception in 1976. In this study, Hu and colleagues analyzed data from 900 coronary events from the NHS
population during 14 years of followup. He determined that a nurse's CHD risk roughly doubled (
relative risk of 1.94,
CI: 1.43 to 2.61) for each 2% increase in trans fat calories consumed (instead of carbohydrate calories). By contrast, it takes more than a 15% increase in saturated fat calories (instead of carbohydrate calories) to produce a similar increase in risk. Eating non-trans unsaturated fats instead of carbohydrates reduces the risk of CHD rather than increasing it. Hu also reports on the benefits of reducing trans fat consumption. Replacing 2% of
food energy from trans fat with non-trans unsaturated fats more than halves the risk of CHD (53%). By comparison, replacing a larger 5% of food energy from saturated fat with non-trans unsaturated fats reduces the risk of CHD by 43%.
There are two accepted tests that measure an individual's risk for coronary heart disease, both
blood tests. The first considers
ratios of two types of
cholesterol, the other the amount of a cell-signalling
cytokine called
C-reactive protein. The ratio test is more accepted, while the cytokine test may be more powerful but is still being studied. (Higher ratios are worse.) One randomized
crossover study published in 2003 comparing the
postprandial effect on blood lipids of (relatively) cis and trans fat rich meals showed that
cholesteryl ester transfer (CET) was 28% higher after the trans meal than after the cis meal and that lipoprotein concentrations were enriched in
apolipoprotein(a) after the trans meals.
C-reactive protein (CRP): A study of over 700 nurses showed that those in the highest quartile of trans fat consumption had blood levels of CRP that were 73% higher than those in the lowest quartile.
Other effects
There are suggestions that the negative consequences of trans fat consumption go beyond the cardiovascular risk. In general, there's much less scientific consensus that eating trans fat specifically increases the risk of other chronic health problems:
Cancer: There is no scientific consensus that consumption of trans fats significantly increases cancer risks across the board. However, one recent study has found connections between trans fat and prostate cancer. An increased intake of trans-fatty acids may raise the risk of breast cancer by 75 per cent, suggest the results from the French part of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition.
Diabetes: There is a growing concern that the risk of type 2 diabetes increases with trans fat consumption. Another study has found no diabetes risk once other factors such as total fat intake and BMI were accounted for.
Obesity: Research indicates that trans fat may increase weight gain and abdominal fat, despite a similar caloric intake. A 6-year experiment revealed that monkeys fed a trans-fat diet gained 7.2% of their body weight, as compared to 1.8% for monkeys on a mono-unsaturated fat diet. Although obesity is frequently linked to trans fat in the popular media, this is generally in the context of eating too many calories; there's no scientific consensus connecting trans fat and obesity.
Liver Dysfunction: Trans fats are metabolized differently by the liver than other fats and interfere with delta 6 desaturase. Delta 6 desaturase is an enzyme involved in converting essential fatty acids to arachidonic acid and prostaglandins, both of which are important to the functioning of cells.
Infertility: One 2007 study found, "Each 2% increase in the intake of energy from trans unsaturated fats, as opposed to that from carbohydrates, was associated with a 73% greater risk of ovulatory infertility…".
Public response and regulation
International
The international trade in food is standardized in the Codex Alimentarius. Hydrogenated oils and fats come under the scope of Codex Stan 19. Non-dairy fat spreads are covered by Codex Stan 256-2007..
Australia
The Australian federal government has indicated that it wants to actively pursue a policy of reducing trans fats from fast foods. The former federal assistant health minister, Christopher Pyne, asked fast food outlets to reduce their trans fat usage. A draft plan was proposed, with a September 2007 timetable, in order to reduce reliance on trans fats and saturated fats.
Currently, Australia's food labeling laws don't require trans fats to be shown separately from the total fat content. However, margarine in Australia has been free of trans fat since 1996.
Canada
In November 2004, an opposition day motion seeking a ban similar to Denmark's was introduced by Jack Layton of the New Democratic Party, and passed through the House of Commons by an overwhelming 193-73 vote. Like all Commons motions, it served as an expression of the views of the House but wasn't binding on the government and has no force under the law.
Since December 2005, Health Canada has required that food labels list the amount of trans fat in the nutrition facts section for most foods. Products with less than 0.2 grams of trans fat per serving may be labeled as free of trans fats. These labelling allowances are not widely known, but as an awareness of them develops, controversy over truthful labelling is growing. In Canada, trans fat quantities on labels include naturally occurring trans fats from animal sources.
In June 2006, a task force co-chaired by Health Canada and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada recommended a limit of 5% trans fat (of total fat) in all products sold to consumers in Canada (2% for tub margarines and spreads). and Food & Consumer Products of Canada has congratulated the task force on the report, although it didn't recommend delaying implementation to 2010 as they'd previously advocated.
Ten months after submitting their report the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and Toronto Public Health issued a plea to the government of Canada: "to act immediately on the task force's recommendations and to eliminate harmful trans fat from Canada's food supply."
On June 20, 2007, the federal government announced its intention to regulate trans fats to the June 2006 standard unless the food industry voluntarily complied with these limits within two years.
On January 1, 2008, Calgary became the first city in Canada to ban trans fats from restaurants and fast food chains. Trans fats present in cooking oils may not exceed 2% of the total fat content.
Denmark
Denmark became the first country to introduce laws strictly regulating the sale of many foods containing trans fats in March 2003, a move which effectively bans partially hydrogenated oils. The limit is 2% of fats and oils destined for human consumption. It should be noted that this restriction is on the ingredients rather than the final products. This regulatory approach has made Denmark the only country in which it's possible to eat "far less" than 1 g of industrially produced trans fats on a daily basis, even with a diet including prepared foods. It is hypothesized that the Danish government's efforts to decrease trans fat intake from 6g to 1g per day over 20 years is related to a 50% decrease in deaths from ischemic heart disease.
European Union
The European Food Safety Authority was asked to produce a scientific opinion on trans fats.
United Kingdom
In October 2005, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) asked for better labelling in the UK. In the July 29, 2006 edition of the British Medical Journal, an editorial also called for better labelling. In January 2007, the British Retail Consortium announced that major UK retailers, including ASDA, Boots, Co-op, Iceland, Marks and Spencer, Sainsbury's, Tesco and Waitrose intend to cease adding trans fatty acids to their own products by the end of 2007.
Sainsbury's became the first UK major retailer to ban all trans fat from all their own brand foods.
On 13 December 2007, the Food Standards Agency issued news releases stating that voluntary measures to reduce trans fats in food had already resulted in safe levels of consumer intake.
United States
Before 2006, consumers in the United States couldn't directly determine the presence (or quantity) of trans fats in food products. This information could only be inferred from the ingredient list, notably from the partially hydrogenated ingredients. According to the FDA, the average American consumes 5.8 grams of trans fat per day (2.6% of calories.)
On July 11, 2003, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a regulation requiring manufacturers to list trans fat on the Nutrition Facts panel of foods and some dietary supplements. The new labeling rule became mandatory across the board, even for companies that petitioned for extensions, on January 1, 2008. However, unlike many other countries trans fat levels of less than 0.5 grams per serving can be listed as 0 grams trans fat on the food label. Though this is a small amount, multiple servings can exceed recommended levels. The FDA didn't approve nutrient content claims such as "trans fat free" or "low trans fat", as they couldn't determine a "recommended daily value", however the agency is planning a consumer study to evaluate the consumer understanding of such claims and perhaps consider a regulation allowing their use on packaged foods. However, there's no requirement to list trans fats on institutional food packaging, thus bulk purchasers like schools, hospitals, and cafeterias are unable to evaluate the trans fat content of commercial food items. The FDA defines trans fats as containing one or more trans linkage that are not in a conjugated system. This is an important distinction, as it distinguishes non-conjugated synthetic trans fats from naturally occurring fatty acids with conjugated trans double bonds, such as conjugated linoleic acid.
Critics of the plan, including FDA advisor Dr. Carlos Camargo, have expressed concern that the 0.5 gram per serving threshold is too high to refer to a food as free of trans fat. This is because a person eating many servings of a product, or eating multiple products over the course of the day may still consume a significant amount of trans fat. Despite this, the FDA estimates that by 2009, trans fat labeling will have prevented from 600 to 1,200 cases of coronary heart disease and 250 to 500 deaths each year. This benefit is expected to result from consumers choosing alternative foods lower in trans fats as well as manufacturers reducing the amount of trans fats in their products.
The American Public Health Association adopted a new policy statement regarding trans fats in 2007. These new guidelines, entitled Restricting Trans Fatty Acids in the Food Supply, recommend that the government require nutrition facts labeling of trans fats on all commercial food products. They also urge federal, state, and local governments to ban and monitor use of trans fats in restaurants. Furthermore, the APHA recommends barring the sales and availability of foods containing significant amounts of trans fat in public facilities including universities, prisons, and day care facilities etc.
Local regulation
Some US cities are acting to reduce consumption of trans fats. In May 2005, Tiburon, California, became the first American city where all restaurants voluntarily cook with trans fat-free oils. Montgomery County, MD approved a ban on partially hydrogenated oils, becoming the first county in the nation to restrict trans fats.
New York City has embarked on a campaign to reduce consumption of trans fats, noting that heart disease is the primary cause of resident deaths. This has included a Public education campaign (see trans fat pamphlet
) and a request to restaurant owners to voluntarily eliminate trans fat from their offerings. Finding that the voluntary program wasn't successful, New York City's Board of Health has solicited public comments on a proposal to ban artificial trans fats in restaurants. The board voted to ban trans fat in restaurant food on December 5, 2006. New York is the first large US city to strictly limit trans fats in restaurants. Restaurants were barred from using most frying and spreading fats containing artificial trans fats above 0.5 g per serving on July 1, 2007, and will have to meet the same target in all of their foods by July 1, 2008.
Philadelphia also recently passed a ban on trans fats. Philadelphia's City Council voted unanimously to pass a ban on February 8, 2007, which was signed into law on February 15, 2007, by Mayor John F. Street. By September 1, 2007, eateries must cease frying food in trans fats. A year later, trans fat must not be used as an ingredient in commercial kitchens. The law doesn't apply to prepackaged foods sold in the city. On October 10, 2007, the Philadelphia City Council approved the use of trans-fats by small bakeries throughout the city.
Albany County of New York passed a ban on trans fats. The ban was adopted after a unanimous vote by the county legislature on May 14, 2007. The decision was made after New York City's decision, but no plan has been put into place. Legislators received a letter from Rick J. Sampson, president and CEO of the New York State Restaurant Association, calling on them to "delay any action on this issue until the full impact of the New York City ban is known."
San Francisco officially asked its restaurants to stop using trans fat in January of 2008. The voluntary program will grant a city decal to restaurants that comply and apply for the decal. Legislators say the next step will be a mandatory ban.
Chicago also considered a ban on oils containing trans fats for large chain restaurants, and finally settled on a partial ban on oils and posting requirements for fast food restaurants.
On December 19, 2006, Massachusetts state representative Peter Koutoujian filed the first state level legislation that would ban restaurants from preparing foods with trans fats. Similarly, Maryland, California, and Vermont are also considering statewide bans of trans fats.
King County of Washington passed a ban on artificial trans fats effective February 1, 2009.
Food industry response
Manufacturer response
The J.M. Smucker Company, American manufacturer of Crisco (the original partially hydrogenated vegetable shortening), in 2004 released a new formulation made from solid saturated palm oil cut with soybean oil and sunflower oil. This blend yielded an equivalent shortening much like the previous partially hydrogenated Crisco, and was labelled zero grams of trans fat per 1 tablespoon serving (as compared with 1.5 grams per tablespoon of original Crisco). As of January 24, 2007, Smucker claims that all Crisco shortening products in the US have been reformulated to contain less than one gram of trans fat per serving while keeping saturated fat content less than butter. The separately marketed trans-fat free version introduced in 2004 was discontinued.
On May 222004, Unilever, the corporate descendant of Joseph Crosfield & Sons (the original producer of Wilhelm Normann's hydrogenation hardened oils) announced that they've eliminated transfats from all their margarine products in Canada, including their flagship Becel brand.
Agribusiness giant Bunge Limited, through their Bunge Oils division are now producing and marketing an NT product line of non-hydrogenated oils, margarines and shortenings, made from corn, canola, and soy oils www.transfatsolutions.com .
Major users' response
Some major food chains have chosen to remove or reduce trans fats in their products. In some cases these changes have been voluntary. In other cases, however, food vendors have been targeted by legal action that has generated a lot of media attention. In May 2003, BanTransFats.com Inc., a U.S. non-profit corporation, filed a lawsuit against the food manufacturer Kraft Foods in an attempt to force Kraft to remove trans fats from the Oreo cookie. The lawsuit was withdrawn when Kraft agreed to work on ways to find a substitute for the trans fat in the Oreo. In November 2006, Arby's announced that by May 2007, it would be eliminating trans fat from its french fries and reducing it in other products.
Similarly, in 2006, the Center for Science in the Public Interest sued KFC over its use of trans fats in fried foods. concerning their class action complaint. KFC reviewed alternative oil options, saying "there are a number of factors to consider including maintaining KFC's unique taste and flavor of Colonel Sanders' Original Recipe". On October 30, 2006, KFC announced that it'll replace the partially hydrogenated soybean oil it currently uses with a zero-trans-fat low linolenic soybean oil in all restaurants in the US by April 2007, although its biscuits will still contain trans-fats. Despite the US-specific nature of the lawsuit, KFC is making changes outside of the US as well; in Canada, KFC's brand owner is switching to trans-fat free Canadian canola oil by early 2007. Wendy's announced in June 2006 plans to eliminate trans-fats from 6,300 restaurants in the United States and Canada, starting in August 2006. In November 2006, Taco Bell made a similar announcement, pledging to remove Trans Fat from many of their menu items by switching to canola oil. By April 2007, 15 Taco Bell menu items were completely free of Trans Fat. In January 2007, McDonald's announced that'll start phasing out the trans fat in their fries after years of testing and several delays. This can be partially attributed to New York's recent ban, with the company stating they wouldn't be selling a unique oil just for New York customers but would implement a nationwide change.
In response to a May 2007 law suit from the Center for Science in the Public Interest, Burger King announced that its 7,100 US restaurants will begin the switch to zero trans-fat oil by the end of 2007.
The Walt Disney Company announced that that'll begin getting rid of trans fats in meals at US theme parks by the end of 2007, and will stop the inclusion of trans fats in licensed or promotional products by 2008.
The Girl Scouts of America announced in November 2006 that all of their cookies will contain less than 0.5g trans fats per serving, thus meeting or exceeding the FDA guidelines for the "zero trans fat" designation.
Health Canada's monitoring program, which tracks the changing amounts of TFA and SFA in fast and prepared foods shows considerable progress in TFA reduction by some industrial users while others lag behind. In many cases, SFAs are being substituted for the TFAs.
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