The Western Journal

Coca-Cola Issues Class II Recall for Popular Canned Drink Due to ‘Foreign Object’ Contamination

The United States Food adn Drug management (FDA) has announced a recall of approximately 10,000 cans of Coca-Cola due to safety concerns. This recall, initiated on March 6, primarily affects products sold in Wisconsin and Illinois.The affected cans may be contaminated with plastic and were bottled at Reyes Coca-Cola bottling in Milwaukee. The company is recalling 864 cases of 12-pack Coca-Cola Classic cans, acknowledging that these products did not meet their quality standards. The recall only impacts specific packs with defined UPC codes and is classified as a class II recall, which indicates that exposure to the product could have temporary or medically reversible health effects, but is unlikely to result in serious consequences. This is not the first Coca-Cola recall, as similar instances occurred in recent years involving other products.


The United States Food and Drug Administration announced the recall of roughly 10,000 cans of Coca-Cola over safety issues.

The recall, which was initiated March 6, predominantly impacted cans sold in Wisconsin and Illinois, according to a report from USA Today.

The cans of Coca-Cola may be contaminated with plastic.

The items were bottled at Reyes Coca-Cola Bottling in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

“Reyes Coca-Cola Bottling is voluntarily recalling 864 cases of 12-pack Coca-Cola Classic in 12-oz cans in Illinois and Wisconsin,” the company said in a statement to USA Today sent Wednesday.

“The cases are being withdrawn because they did not meet our high-quality standards,” the company added.

“We are taking this voluntary action because nothing is more important to us than providing high-quality products to the people who drink our beverages.”

The recall only applies to the 12-can packs of Coca-Cola with a UPC code of 0 49000-00634 6 or 0 49000-02890 4, according to a report from Fox Business.

The move was classified as a Class II recall, defined by the FDA website as a scenario in which “use of, or exposure to, a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote.”

It’s not as severe as a Class I recall, which happens in situations where “there is a reasonable probability” that the use of the product will “cause serious adverse health consequences or death.”

But it’s more severe than a Class III recall, a situation in which “use of, or exposure to, a violative product is not likely to cause adverse health consequences.”

It’s not the first time Coca-Cola products have been recalled in recent years.

There were some 2,000 cases of Sprite, Fanta Orange, and Diet Coke recalled two years ago by United Packers in Alabama for potential contamination by “foreign material.”

The decision impacted stores in Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi.

That was also a Class II recall.

“Coca-Cola Bottling UNITED voluntarily recalled a limited quantity of Fanta Orange, Sprite and Diet Coke in a total of 48 stores,” a company representative said at the time.

“No impacted product remains in the market, and all recall activities in those markets are complete.”




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