Poisonous weeds disrupted Australian spinach growers

Published 2023년 8월 9일

Tridge summary

Australian producer Dino Borrato suffered a loss of nearly $1 million when over 100 people were allegedly poisoned after consuming contaminated spinach. The contamination, caused by a poisonous weed found in a specific brand of spinach, led to a decline in consumer demand for both packaged and unpackaged spinach. Eight months later, the spinach sector still struggles to recover as consumers continue to avoid packaged spinach and not seek it elsewhere, leading to a significant decline in overall spinach sales.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

In December last year, producer Dino Borrato, who works out of Bacchus Marsh in central Victoria, Australia, lost nearly $1 million overnight when more than 100 Australians were allegedly poisoned after eating contaminated spinach. The infestation was traced to the noxious weed thorn apple, a poisonous invasive species found in a brand of spinach from a New South Wales farm. Borrato said consumer demand for packaged and unpackaged spinach plummeted overnight. But it's not over yet: eight months later, he's still repairing the damage. In fact, the contamination has devastated the country's spinach sector. Major supermarkets recalled dozens of spinach products from across the country after announcing that the product was not safe to consume. Borrato said that, despite the one-time incident, consumers avoided packaged spinach in supermarkets and did not look ...
Source: AGF

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