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| Starbucks plans to cuts trans fats at coffeehouses |
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| www.chinaview.cn
2007-01-05 14:53:33
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BEIJING, Jan. 5 (Xinhua) -- Starbucks, the U.S.-based
multinational coffeehouse chain, has promised to cut trans fats from its
doughnuts, muffins and other treats in more than 200 coffeehouses in China.
Eden Woon, vice president of Starbucks China, made
the announcement after the company publicized plans to cut trans fats in half of
its U.S. stores this week.
Starbucks China would make every effort to cut the
trans fats in all its stores and had started to avoid procuring food containing
trans fats.
Trans fats, listed on food labels as partially
hydrogenated vegetable oil, are believed to be harmful to cholesterol levels.
Starbucks China would replace food containing the
trans fats with no effect on overall prices of its products, said Woon.
However, Starbucks had no timetable to cut trans fats
in China.
"Different providers provide different food in
different stores all over China and customers' tastes are different. It takes
time to completely cut trans fats in all the stores in China," said Woon.
Trans fat is still a new word in China and the
authorities have made no moves to regulate the use of trans fats in restaurant
food, said an official with the National Grain and Oil Standardization
Committee.
The Nasdaq-listed Starbucks has more than 12,000
outlets in North America, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and the Pacific
Rim.
It opened its first outlet in Beijing in 1999 and now
has more than 200 stores in 20 mainland cities.
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