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Nestlé and Danone: Stop Feeding Babies Plastic
Parents buy baby food trusting that companies like Nestlé and Danone are putting babies’ health first. New testing suggests that trust may be dangerously misplaced.
Greenpeace-commissioned laboratory testing found microplastics in baby food pouches sold by Nestlé’s Gerber and Danone’s Happy Baby Organics. Researchers estimated that a full Gerber pouch could contain more than 5,000 microplastic particles — and a full Happy Baby pouch could contain more than 11,000.
No parent should have to wonder whether feeding their child means feeding them plastic.
Baby food pouches have exploded in popularity, with U.S. sales reportedly rising about 900% between 2010 and 2023. These products are marketed as convenient, safe, and family-friendly — but Greenpeace’s report warns that plastic spout pouches may expose babies to tiny plastic fragments and packaging-related chemicals.
Babies and toddlers are still developing. Their bodies should not be the testing ground for plastic-lined packaging, vague safety assurances, or corporate convenience.
Nestlé and Danone depend on parents’ trust. If they want to keep that trust, they need to publicly disclose what they know, independently test every pouch product, remove hazardous plastics and chemicals from baby food packaging, and move quickly to safer, non-toxic alternatives.
Thanks for all that you do,
Matt from the Swarm
