Plant Stanol and Sterol Ester Markets Seek to Rebound with New Products
12 March 2001 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
By Carey Krause
Despite disappointing sales for the margarine-like spreads
containing plant sterol and plant sterol esters and resulting
overcapacity, raw material suppliers of these products are still
optimistic about their long-term prospects in the functional food
and dietary supplement market.
Plant sterol and sterol products are used in the margarine-like
spreads Benecol from Johnson & Johnson's McNeil Consumer Health
Care and Take Control from Unilever' Lipton. Sluggish sales in 2000
for Benecol, in particular, have led to an oversupply of sterols
and stanols and the suspension of two sterol production ventures by
the European leader in plant sterol and plant sterol esters
production, Raisio.
Raisio procures phytosterols for Benecol from both the vegetable
oil and wood processing industry. The main portion of the supply
comes from the vegetable oil industry, and it is estimated that
Raisio procures a significant bulk of the market. Raisio produces
stanol and sterol ester at plants in Charleston, S.C., and Raisio,
Finland, which operate under a combined utilization rate of roughly
40 percent.
Following disappointing sales last year, Raisio took a
á37.9 million charge to revise its Benecol strategy. The
Benecol division posted a decline in turnover to á23 million
due to a substantial fall in stanol ester deliveries to North
America because McNeil was using the large stocks it had purchased
the previous year.
Raiso had projected that Benecol products containing stanol
esters would become major functional foods. Raisio launched several
projects to develop ways of separating sterol from wood. The
largest project was a pine oil and sterol separation project
(Detsea) in Chile, and the Westerol project planned for North
America. Last fall, based on declining sales, Raisio released
itself from the planned sterol separation project in Chile together
with its partner Harting SA, suspended the Solex project in New
Zealand and subjected other sterol separation projects to a
reassessment on a case-by-case basis.
Raisio is now adopting a new approach based on functional food
ingredients with the intention of building a worldwide network
through which cholesterol-reducing stanol and sterol esters can be
marketed to consumers. Raisio's first major sterol ester client as
of December is the Argentine dairy Mastellone Hnos, followed by a
Benecol stanol ester supply deal with Finnish meat and food
processing company Atria and a December agreement with the Finnish
company Valio.
In January, Raisio was awarded another US patent (applicable for
sterols taken orally or as a food additive) for its substance for
lowering high cholesterol level in serum and related methods, an
improvement over its earlier US patents in 1996 and 1999.
In addition to Raisio, other suppliers of phytosterols include
Cargill Inc., Archer Daniels Midland Company, Cognis and Forbes
Medi-Tech Inc. The French turpentine producer DRT and Finland's UPM
Kymmene are also producers of plant sterols and sterol
products.
Last month, Forbes Medi-Tech started to wind down operations at
its pilot manufacturing plant in Amqui, Quebec, following the
build-up of its manufacturing capacity in Texas. In January, Forbes
Medi-Tech and Chusei formed a $19.8 million joint venture plan to
construct and operate a manufacturing plant scheduled to come on
line in 2001, with 1,000 metric tons capacity for tall oil-based
phytosterols, which included both commodity wood-based sterols as
well as Forbes' proprietary plant sterol composition called
Phytrol.
In February, Forbes Medi-Tech announced a deal with Pauls
Limited, an Austrialian dairy producer, to launch Locol milk
products enriched with branded Reducol, Forbe's proprietary plant
sterol composition, Phytrol, which is exclusively licensed on a
worldwide basis to Novartis Consumer Health. The first consumer
food products containing Reducol were test marketed in the USA and
Australia in the fall of 2000, and several additional food product
launches are planned for this year.
Forbes has also acquired proprietary technology to extract
phytosterols from pitch, a forestry by-product, from B.C.
Chemicals, a division of the Canfor Corp. of Vancouver, B.C. The
deal offers Forbes opportunity to purchase pitch as well as an
option to build a manufacturing facility at the B.C. chemicals site
in Prince George.
Forbes is also developing fermentation technology that converts
plant sterols into pharmaceutical fine chemicals for steroids and
anti-inflammatories.
Cargill, a marketer and seller of sterol esters worldwide uses
vegetable oil, a co-product of their vitamin E production process.
Cargill was awarded a recent patent that enables the formulation of
sterols in emulsified systems. They will formulate sterols into
food products that are not fat-based such as margarines and
spreads.
Subject to FDA approval, Cargill plans to use their proprietary
technology to produce spreads, dressings, yogurts and food bars.
Cargill was the first to receive GRAS (generally regarded as safe)
status for the use of sterol esters in these four categories. It is
not known when the products will be in supermarkets, yet Cargill is
working with food companies toward that end. A Cargill official
identifies dietary supplements and foods as active growth platforms
for the company's ingredients.
Also in February, Archer Daniels Midland Company and Lifeline
Technologies announced a worldwide exclusive licensing agreement
for phytosterol technology applicable to foods and beverages. ADM
has developed a patent-pending phytosterol formulation that could
be included in beverages, dairy drinks, and nonfat foods, while
Monsanto recently received a patent on a "phytosterol protein
complex" said to "increase the bioavailability of
phytosterols."
Global raw material supplies of vegetable oil sterols are
estimated at between 4,000 to 4,500 tons, and tall oil-based
sterols add roughly 500 tons to the total. "A bit more capacity can
be added worldwide to the vegetable oil sterols market, yet the
real potential to enlarge the plant sterol market is within the
tall oil or wood processing industry," says a Raisio official.
DRT was the first to produce beta-sitosterol extracted by
solvents from tall oil pitch, a product of pine tree. A new DRT
plant in Saint-Girons, France, is the only one in the world able to
produce several tons of beta-sitosterol from pine tree. UPM-Kymmene
of Finland produces wood-based sterols for Raisio and operates at
full capacity--70 tons of sterols annually.
Cognis Nutrition and Health, a business unit of Cognis B.V.
headquartered in The Netherlands, is a long-standing producer of
the natural phystosterols brand Generol, which is supplied to food,
pharmaceutical and cosmetics companies globally.
The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) is working with several
US corporations toward an exclusive US license to manufacture and
commercialize the esterified corn fiber oil, called Amaizing Oil,
for use in cooking oils and dairy products, specifically, but also
spreads and chocolates.
Kevin B. Hicks, research leader, plant science and technology
research, Eastern Regional Research Center, ARS, USDA, says unlike
phytosterols in soy or tall oil, most of the phytosterols in corn
fiber oil, patented in 1998, are naturally esterified with either
fatty acids or phenolic acids. "Corn fiber appears to be a rich
source of natural stanols and contains gamma tocopherol and
carotenoids, both antioxidants," and is being studied as
anti-cholesterol agent.
Goodman Fielder's sterol product called Logicol is available in
Australia as a spread, mayonnaise, coleslaw dressing, milk and
breakfast bar and is distributed by the local food brands
Meadowlea, Praise, Dairy Farmers and Uncle Toby's. Procter &
Gamble has introduced a new line of phytosterol-containing cooking
oils under the brand name Crisco CookSmart. These oils contain soy
phytosterol esters. P&G is the first company to market a
phytosterol containing cooking oil. Currently the company is
testing the oil in only Sun City, Fla., and Cincinnati, Ohio. ADM's
technology should provide for applications of phytosterols in
beverages, yogurt and non-fat or low-fat foods.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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