ACCC Chairman Rod Sims
(Photo: ACCC)

September 4, 2015

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has investigated alleged misleading conduct in the pork industry arising from claims such as “free range”, “bred free range” and “bred outdoors”.

ACCC chairman Rod Sims said on Thursday that individual producers and the peak representative industry body, Australian Pork Limited, have co-operated to address the ACCC’s concerns.

“It is important that the description on product packaging and in promotional material accurately reflects the living conditions of the animals raised for the production of meat products,” Mr Sims said.

“Marketing material must use words that consumers can understand, irrespective of whether the words have some special industry meaning.”

The ACCC has accepted court enforceable undertakings from P&M Quality Smallgoods Pty Ltd (trading as Primo Smallgoods), George Weston Foods Pty Ltd (trading as KR Castlemaine) and Pastoral Pork Company Pty Ltd (trading as Otway Pork) as a result of the investigations.

In each of these cases, the ACCC considered that the reference to either “free range” (used by Primo Smallgoods) or “bred free range” (used by Otway Pork and KR Castlemaine) in the promotion and labelling of the pork products was likely to give consumers the overall impression that the pigs were farmed according to free range methods, ie.  at a minimum, the pigs were able to move about freely in an outdoor paddock on most ordinary days.

Portions of some of the offending labels

This was not the case.

“In the undertakings, the producers have acknowledged that the conduct may have contravened the Australian Consumer Law,” Mr Sims said.

“In all cases, the producers have committed not to use the same descriptions unless their farming practices are such that, at a minimum, the pigs are able to move about freely in an outdoor paddock on most ordinary days. They have also agreed to implement consumer law compliance programs and publish corrective notices.”

Separately, Australian Pork Limited has agreed to change the title and logo of one of its pork production standards from “Outdoor Bred” to “Outdoor Bred. Raised Indoors On Straw”.

The ACCC considers that the inclusion of the words “raised indoors on straw” makes it clearer to consumers that the pigs are born outdoors but raised indoors from weaning until slaughter.

The ACCC understands that some traders have used the “Outdoor Bred” and “Bred Free Range” statements to describe the living conditions of the sow, the mother pig, rather than the pigs that are raised and slaughtered for the pork product sold to consumers.

The ACCC considers that consumers are unlikely to interpret these marketing statements to refer to the sow and therefore considers that use of these statements in this context is likely to be misleading.

“When claims such as ‘free range’ or ‘bred free range’ are misused, consumers may be misled into paying more for a product feature that doesn’t exist,” Mr Sims said.

“Competitors are also harmed as legitimate free range producers unfairly lose their competitive advantage. Innovation suffers when consumers and business lose trust in the integrity of claims.”

The three court enforceable undertakings are available on the s87B undertakings register


 

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