Cadmium: New challenge for food safety?
Cadmium is a heavy metal found in the environment. It comes in part from nature, i.e. from decayed rocks or volcanic eruptions. Furthermore, it has also reached soil and water body sediments over a period of many years from mining, industrial or agricultural sources. Moreover, cadmium spreads via air in the environment. The concentrations vary from region to region. Cadmium can accumulate in plants and animals and is absorbed by humans from various foods. The heavy metal leads to kidney damage if large amounts are ingested over longer periods. It has also been classified as a human carcinogen.
The foods with the highest cadmium levels are innards, seafood, wild mushrooms and oilseeds. By contrast, meat, eggs and milk have relatively low levels. This is confirmed by the comprehensive food monitoring data of the federal government and federal states. Aside from this, eating habits play a decisive role in cadmium intake. Based on the most recent data from the National Food Consumption Study II of the Max Rubner Institute, experts have estimated the cadmium intake of the German population. According to this, consumers with an average consumption of all foods use up almost 58% of the tolerable weekly intake established by EFSA. Some groups like adolescents and consumers with special eating habits (for instance high consumption of vegetables and cereals) have a higher intake. These so-called heavy consumers use up 94% of the tolerable intake through food consumption.
Nonetheless, experts do not advise heavy consumers to make major changes to their eating habits. After all, no one disputes the benefits of eating fruit and vegetables: preventive effect for certain types of cancer, cardiovascular diseases and type 2 diabetes. Against this backdrop the participants in the status seminar discussed ways of reducing cadmium levels in food, for instance by using low cadmium fertiliser and the cultivation of types of plants that accumulate less cadmium. Given the widespread natural occurrence of cadmium in the soil and the inputs by mining and industry spanning several years, reduction strategies can only be successful in the long term. In the opinion of the participants, this challenge must be taken up jointly by all the stakeholders from environmental protection, food safety, agriculture and food production across Europe.
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