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Why Is Palm Oil in So Many Foods Now?

Why Is Palm Oil in So Many Foods Now?

If you’ve read ingredient labels, you may be wondering why is palm oil in so many foods now. You are correct in thinking this wasn’t always the case. For most types of foods, palm oil was the exception rather than the rule.

One example is Oreo cookies. This product stands out to me personally because this type of sandwich cookie is what first alerted us to my son’s palm oil allergy and intolerance.

We noticed whenever my son had generic Oreo’s his grandparent’s house, he would go from being completely fine to becoming congested and needing to use Kleenex. This would happen within minutes. 

These were original sandwich cookies from Walmart, their Great Value brand. It was so nice his grandparents would buy these for our kids… it was their “thing” to do which they wanted to be special.

But something in these cookies was causing him to have allergic reactions so we agreed he couldn’t eat them anymore. My son and I decided he should just say “no thank you” going forward. 

While we hadn’t been reading labels regularly, we never remembered seeing ‘palm oil” on an ingredient label before. We never heard of palm oil. We checked our Oreo packages at home, and at the time (in 2016 – 2017) they didn’t contain palm oil.

I had been buying the regular flavor and a few different flavors somewhat regularly from Target. In addition, for parties and for school functions, I would buy the large box of regular Oreo’s from Costco.

So we thought palm oil is what this cheaper Great Value generic version used; the palm oil in them was what made these cookies cheaper than the brand name, Nabisco cookies.

Late in 2017, we cross-referenced other foods that were causing my son to have allergic reactions. All of them contained palm oil.

Since then, we have worked hard to avoid palm oil. I read labels for every single food item before buying it. In 2018, when I went to buy the Nabisco Oreo’s again, I was shocked to discover they listed palm oil in the ingredients. 

More foods containing palm oil

As I continued reading labels, I learned that many of his favorite snacks and foods that were once palm oil free now were containing palm oil. I tracked this closely, as it was / is very personal to us.

Palm oil makes my son sick. We didn’t want him to become sick as his reactions often included much more than “just” congestion. We wanted to know what foods he could safely eat.

In 2018, I started noticing that many packaged and processed foods were changing their ingredients to include palm oil.

Why is palm oil in so many foods now?

If it seems like most foods have palm oil in them now, that’s because many do. There are a few reasons for this. Much of this has to do with the ban on artificial trans fats.

Artificial Trans Fats, Trans Fatty Acids and PHOs

According to heart.org, artificial trans fats and trans fatty acids have been linked to many health issues. They were under the label of Partially Hydrogenated Oils (PHOs). 

What are artificial trans fats?

Trans fatty acids, artificial trans fats, and PHOs are man-made ingredients in an industrial process. They are the result of adding hydrogen to liquid vegetable oils in order to make them more solid.

Why did food companies use trans fats?

Why did companies add artificial trans fats to their foods, especially if there was controversy around these ingredients? Companies want to make as much money as possible.

Trans fatty acids were cheap. It was less expensive for food companies to add artificial trans fats to their processed and packaged foods than to use “real” ingredients to give them the qualities they wanted.

Companies added them to foods as an inexpensive way to make foods creamy, to thicken foods, to add to the mouthfeel experience, and to make foods last a long time.

FDA’s ban on artificial trans fats and trans fatty acids

However, there was so much controversy around these ingredients that in 2015, in the United States, the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) decided they were no longer Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS).

The trans fat ban meant that food manufacturers could no longer add artificial trans fats and trans fatty acids to foods. 

Note, trans fats that occur naturally in foods still exist. These are considered naturally-occurring trans fats. They occur in some meats and dairy products.

The FDA’s ban’s original deadline was June 2018. Products in the supply chain were still allowed to be on the shelves after that date. However, companies were not allowed to introduce new products to market that contained artificial trans fats.

The FDA then recognized it might take companies longer to find alternatives to trans fats so there was an extension until January 1, 2020.

Trans fats and the global food supply

Due to the health concerns, the World Health Organization (WHO) called on governments throughout the world to replace artificial trans fats from foods. This made the issue to find replacements for trans fats a global issue. WHO released a guide to eliminate industrially-produced trans fats from the global food supply.

What did artificial trans fats do in foods?

PHOs made foods creamy as well as added to mouthfeel. They also extended the shelf-life of foods.

In the United States, some examples of foods that used artificial trans fats / PHOs were:

  • Ice cream, frozen dairy desserts
  • Butter-like spreads, margarine
  • Peanut butter and peanut butter spreads
  • Frozen desserts, pre-made desserts
  • Packaged cookies and crackers
  • Potato snacks in cans 
  • Instant noodles in cups and packages (Ramen)
  • Refrigerated rolls, biscuits, dough, pie crust, frozen pizza
  • Canned frosting
  • Whipped cream, creamers
  • Cheaper candies, chocolate-flavored candy

These are now the types of foods that contain palm oil. The trans fat ban is a big reason that palm oil is in so many foods now.

So many foods contained them… those foods now use palm oil instead. Learn about the ingredients in canned frosting. I have yet to find a container without palm oil.

Food manufacturers needed to find alternatives

When we discovered my son having reactions from palm oil, (at the end of 2017 and into 2018) our family started reading all labels.

As the year processed, we were noticing how many packaged and processed foods that we thought were okay and safe for my son to have, now contained palm oil ingredients.

Even more frustrating, we learned that ingredients such as Mono- and Diglycerides, Glycerin, and Tocopherols — were often also made with palm oil.

While they may not have “palm” in the name, the ingredients are made from palm oil. These are called palm oil derivatives. 

There are hundreds of names for palm oil derivatives.

We found Palm Oil, Palm Kernel Oil, Hydrogenated Palm Oil, and Mono- and Diglycerides on many boxes of cookies and crackers.

As companies were forced to eliminate artificial trans fats, many turned to palm oil.

Using palm oil in foods instead of PHOs

When you think about why food manufacturers used artificial trans fats in their packaged foods, it make sense that they turned to palm oil as a replacement.

Palm oil is also very cheap. In addition, it has many uses in foods, making it desirable to companies. Palm oil mimics what artificial trans fats did in foods. It makes foods smooth and creamy. Palm oil contributes to the mouthfeel. It doesn’t have a taste. Palm oil can be semi-solid at room temperature.

Most of all, it is cheap. Many companies would rather use palm oil to mimic an attribute rather than use a natural ingredient to create that attribute.

Examples are companies using palm oil in ice cream so they can use less real cream or palm oil in chocolate to replace cocoa butter. Palm oil is cheaper than cream and cocoa butter.

palm oil in doughnuts

Palm oil is used often to make doughnuts and other store-bought desserts

Palm oil is in many packaged foods

Because this issue is so personal to us with our son getting sick, and because we learned about the environmental concerns surrounding palm oil, I started this website to educate people about how common palm oil is in everyday products.

I want to give ideas to reduce palm oil demand.

I have written many posts about foods that now contain palm oil.

When you consider the list above in which we spelled out where trans fats were common, you will find these categories to be the ones to contain palm oil now.

Palm oil is common in these foods now:

I compiled a big list of palm oil free products which includes foods and brands that don’t contain palm oil. These are our favorite Costco foods we buy that are palm oil free. 

Companies use palm oil in new foods

When food manufacturers introduce new products and new flavors, many of them now contain palm oil.

Many of these companies were the ones using artificial trans fats and were forced to find replacement ingredients. Being these companies now have palm oil in their products, it’s been an easy transition for them to use palm oil in new product introductions.

Other food manufacturers never used artificial trans fats in their products but have learned that palm oil can be a cheap option as well.

In addition to adding creaminess, texture, and mouthfeel, it extends shelf life. It helps make foods chewy. Palm oil helps crunchy foods stay crunchy. Using palm oil enables companies to make more money — they can add it foods like ice cream and chocolate — to lower their costs on raw materials.

In addition, many companies changed existing products over to palm oil — in order to further save money and make more money. I can think of several examples in which even after the ban, the companies changed their ingredients to include palm oil. (Cue many brands of peanut butter, OREOs, Mr. Goodbar, and Peanut M&Ms here.) I have lots of information on this in my post about palm oil free candy.

Therefore, we learned to read labels every time before we buy foods, even foods we have bought for years.

Many times, companies discontinue their products that didn’t contain palm oil and replace them with new versions that contain palm oil ingredients.

What can you do?

When you go grocery shopping or shop for grocery online, think about the fruits and vegetables you can buy.

Fresh foods don't contain palm oil

Whole, fresh foods don’t contain palm oil

Think about the packaged foods you buy and what’s in them. What healthy snacks can you choose that have as few ingredients as possible?

Palm oil common in packaged foods

Palm oil is in so many foods now because companies aren’t allowed to add artificial trans fats to foods. Once palm oil became so common in foods, more companies started using it — even in foods that never contained trans fats.

When companies introduce new products or new flavors, they are often using palm oil now. 

Not only is palm oil very cheap, it is a versatile oil. As manufacturers learned more about its uses, they started adding it as a cheap alternative to foods that didn’t contain artificial trans fats. Palm oil is in so many more foods than ever before.

Please leave your comments below. What makes you interested in this topic? Thanks for reading!

Geo Kidd

Thursday 11th of January 2024

Thank you so much for this well-researched article. I've been trying to spark interest in the disastrous impacts of the palm oil market for years. This week, for the first time, I saw a package with the label, "Palm oil free" on it!! Your article needs to be widely distributed. Your lists, such as "Costco foods without palm oil" and "cosmetics without palm oil" will be extremely valuable in this fight.

editor

Friday 12th of January 2024

Thanks so much for taking the time to write in. That's great you saw a company advertise their product is palm oil free! Do you recall what product it was?

Darlena L Smith

Thursday 14th of December 2023

I read labels, have for years. And saw the increased use of Palm Oil, Palm Kernel Oil. I have been upset about this for a long time because originally, my understanding was the corporations harvesting the palm oil, palm kernel Oil, were invading indigenous people's forests/living spaces with no regard for them. They claim they now only harvest from sustainable company owned areas. But how can I know they didn't take over areas from those who couldn't fight back/defend their property /rights??This year I noticed it is being put in peanut & almond butters. Which to me made no sense what so ever!! Fortunately, there is a certain brand that is organic & doesn't use palm oil or other ingredients I don't need, or want to ingest. But I have been as irate about the palm oil/palm kernel oil as I am about high-fructose corn syrup & artificial sweeteners. It's at the point that this 58 yr old wants to only eat food she prepared from scratch at home, and believes our culture needs to go back to that practice.

editor

Thursday 14th of December 2023

Thanks so much for your comment. You make excellent points, and they are helpful to everyone reading.

It is very difficult to know where palm oil is sourced from, even with RSPO and other endorsements. My stance, motivated by what my son has gone through (getting so sick from it) along with the environmental concerns (deforestation, displacing people, wildlife, etc.) has been to avoid it as much as I possibly can. I don't want to contribute to overall demand. We are to the point of not going out to eat "just because" and eat 99.9% of the time at home. It's the only way to know for sure... It's usually healthier too!