News

Bowing to mounting consumer and regulatory pressure, Kellogg’s announced it will remove all artificial dyes from its ...
Some of the nation’s top candy brands will no longer have artificial dyes starting in 2026. In July, Mars Wrigley announced that four of its products: M&M’s, Skittles Original, Extra Gum Spearmint and ...
In July, Mars pushed back on Kennedy’s initiative and refrained from joining a group of major food companies like Nestle, ...
This comes nearly a decade after the company first said it would remove all artificial colors from its products, before ...
Texas Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton said Wednesday that Kellogg had signed an agreement assuring his office that the Michigan-based ...
Mars Wrigley is offering some of its most popular products without artificial food dyes, making it the latest company to fall ...
Already, a large number of top brands, including General Mills, Kraft Heinz, Nestlé, Hershey, J.M. Smucker, McCormick, Pepsico and Sam’s Club, have taken steps to replace the artificial dyes ...
West Virginia’s ban on synthetic dyes was cheered by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has successfully pressured food makers to agree to remove artificial colors from their products.
Other states have enacted similar laws that would strip artificial dyes from school meals, but West Virginia’s action is the first to take effect, starting Aug. 1.