Toronto
A café chain in Ontario was recently told by Canadian food inspectors to remove $8,000 of Vegemite from its shelves because it didn't meet Health Canada regulations. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has now chimed in on the issue.
Anthony Albanese says he doesn't understand why Canada would allow Marmite imports, but not Vegemite
Ethan Lang · CBC News
·
An Ontariocafé chain fighting Canadian food regulators for permission to keep selling Vegemite now has the backing of the Australian prime minister.
Leighton Walters, an Australian-Canadian dual citizen who owns the Aussie-inspired Found Coffee chain locatedin Toronto and Guelph, was recently ordered by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) to remove $8,000 of Vegemite from his shelves and products.
After an inspection of a shipment he'd imported this winter, the CFIA deemed the Vegemite non-compliant with Health Canada regulations. Although it's a staple in Australian households, the yeasty spread is enriched with Vitamin B, which is only permitted in certain products in Canada.
Walters has stopped selling the product, but is still fighting the decision. After taking his story to the media last week and contacting the Australian Trade and Investment Commission for help, he's now garnered the support of Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
At a news conference in Australia Tuesday, reporters asked Albanese if he had a message for Canada in response to the dispute.
"I stand with the Aussie café owner," Albanese said. "I love Vegemite. It's a good thing. I did hear the report on that. It's rather odd that they're letting Marmite in, which is rubbish, frankly."
Marmite, a similar yeasty spread made in the U.K. that's also enriched with vitamins, was explicitly deemed legal for import by the CFIA in a statement in 2020, after a shipment was mistakenly rejected.
Albanese didn't say whether he'd be contacting Canadian officials about the CFIA decision.
WATCH| Australian-Canadian café owner fighting regulators over Vegemite removal: Australian owner of Toronto café chain fighting Ottawa to save $8K of Vegemite 4 days ago Duration 2:13
The CFIA said in a statement Sunday that Vegemite is not prohibited for sale in Canada, but manufacturers must alter the product to make it compliant with regulations.
However, the CFIA isn't aware of any Vegemite product that is produced to be sold in Canada in compliance with Canadian regulations, according to the spokesperson.
Since all Vegemite products are enriched with vitamins, that would suggest the product should be prohibited for sale in Canada. Despite that, the product is available for purchase on Amazon Canada's website and at specialty retailers around the country.
A spokesperson for Health Canada said in an email that the addition of vitamins is limited to certain foods "to help ensure that Canadians get sufficient but not excessive amounts of certain nutrients in their diet."
- Australian owner of Toronto café chain fighting Ottawa to save $8K of Vegemite
Walters says he'd been selling jars of Vegemite and offering it on toast and in pastries at his cafés for five years before any issue arose.
Walters told CBC Toronto that CFIA has also ordered him to destroy the Vegemite he removed from his shelves. The agency's spokesperson denied that in an email Sunday, saying Walters was only ordered to remove the product from his shelves.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ethan Lang
Reporter
Ethan Lang is a reporter for CBC Toronto. Ethan has also worked in Whitehorse, where he covered the Yukon Legislative Assembly, and Halifax, where he wrote on housing and forestry for the Halifax Examiner.
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices·
About CBC NewsCorrections and clarifications·Submit a news tip·
Related Stories
- Australian owner of Toronto café chain fighting Ottawa to save $8K of Vegemite
- Marketplace found up to 1 in 3 groceries get labelled as Canadian. Customers say they're skeptical
- 'Buy Canadian' Reddit post becomes secret ingredient to help save Ontario condiment business
- Canadian food processor urges feds to axe reciprocal steel tariff or store prices will rise
- Trump isn't just a Canadian campaign issue. Australia grapples with its U.S. relationship in election