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French report highlights failings in infant formula scandal

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
May 20, 2026
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 11 mins read
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French report highlights failings in infant formula scandal
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Infant formulas: "shortcomings" on the part of the government and manufacturers

Infant formulas: “shortcomings” on the part of the government and manufacturers


Keystone-SDA

A French parliamentary report published on Tuesday says the handling of Nestlé’s infant formula scandal exposed “shortcomings” by both the French government and manufacturers, which should be taken into account in any future crises.





Generated with artificial intelligence.


This content was published on


May 20, 2026 – 11:41

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The scandal broke in December 2025 when Swiss-based food giant Nestlé recalled dozens of batches across around 60 countries over fears they could contain cereulide, a toxin that can cause severe vomiting in newborn babies.

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Food safety

Does infant formula have too many ingredients?




This content was published on


Feb 26, 2026



Several European countries, including in Switzerland, have reported illnesses that may be linked to toxic contamination in infant formula.



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The crisis then escalated, with a series of similar recalls by manufacturers including France’s Danone and Lactalis, as well as smaller firms such as Lucerne-based Hochdorf (Bimbosan) and Bordeaux-based Vitagermine (Babybio Optima), which continued until last February.

+ The meltdown at NestléExternal link

What they had in common was a single ingredient – an oil rich in arachidonic acid (ARA) – by the same Chinese supplier.

Families and campaign groups then accused manufacturers of being too slow to launch recalls, and criticised the French government for relying too heavily on their goodwill.

“The infant formula crisis has exposed a number of shortcomings that need to be addressed in future,” the report’s authors said.

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Nestlé CEO apologises in video for baby food recall

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Swiss food giant Nestlé apologises after biggest baby formula recall in its history




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Jan 14, 2026



Nestlé has recalled batches of infant formula in around 60 countries as a precaution, in what is the biggest recall in the company’s history.



Read more: Swiss food giant Nestlé apologises after biggest baby formula recall in its history


“If we look at the timeline, there was clearly a problem,” said Mathilde Hignet, co-author of the report. She told the AFP news agency that after learning on December 24 that the contamination was linked to ARA oil, Nestlé did not inform manufacturers until December 30, and only informed the French authorities on January 5.

Alongside her co-rapporteur, MP Michel Lauzzana of the Renaissance party, she also questioned “how robust the checks carried out by the Chinese supplier were” and criticised the “limited resources of the authorities”, which have led to “growing reliance on manufacturers’ own controls”.

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There have been reports of hospitalisation of infants who were fed the recalled formula in France and Spain.

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Food safety

Infant formula recall: Is trying to copy breastmilk increasing risk of contamination?




This content was published on


Feb 25, 2026



A contaminated additive found naturally in breastmilk is responsible for the recent recall of infant formula worldwide.



Read more: Infant formula recall: Is trying to copy breastmilk increasing risk of contamination?


The report asks whether all products containing ARA oil from the Chinese supplier should have been recalled immediately, rather than waiting for test results. It also points to the authorities’ “relatively late” response, noting it took 17 days to inform all health professionals.

To date, the health impact remains unclear. In France, authorities initially reported three deaths among babies who had consumed the recalled milk. However, in two cases, in Angers and Bordeaux, the milk has since been ruled out as the cause.

Looking ahead to future crises, the report’s authors set out 14 recommendations. These include tighter oversight of “added ingredients” such as ARA oil, more independent checks funded by manufacturers, and improved warning procedures when products for children are involved.

Translated from French by AI/sp

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch

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