Talk:Tate & Lyle: Difference between revisions
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== Stabiliser called HG1 == |
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==Domino== |
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Can we add Domino sugar to make a list of brands? |
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I tried to find out what HG1 actually is and only found article after article discussing the death and it as this mysterious ingredient. The linked source has: |
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==Oldest brand?== |
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How do GNR and BBC reckon T&L to be the UKs oldest brand? According to the article T&L was founded in 1921 out of two companies (the oldest Lyle being founded in 1865). |
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> Eaton said when they had signed the licence agreement, Gosling told Planet Coconut about “his secret ingredient” – a stabiliser called HG1 designed with the food giant Tate & Lyle’s Australian subsidiary. “He was very protective of his recipe,” she said. |
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Either date is way too late as UK's oldest brand when you consider that Lloyds was established in 1688, Bank of Scotland 1695, Crosse and Blackwell 1706, Royal Sun Insurance 1710, Whitbread 1742, Wedgwood 1759, Yardley 1770, Bass 1777... and so on (in fact under brands, Wikipedia has a useful list of businesses going back to c1000). |
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Even this coroner inquest ttps://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Celia-Marsh-Prevention-of-future-deaths-report-2022-0379_Published.pdf is vague |
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Against this T&L is an also ran! |
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> The contamination arose because an ingredient in the yogurt called HG1 had become cross-contaminated with milk protein during its manufacture |
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It can't even claim to have the oldest registered UK trademark as Bass had No1 on 1st January 1876. Perhaps what they meant was that T&L has the oldest pack design. Even so, I would have thought that the likes of Colman's mustard, Bass Light Ale and .. if not UK, bottled Guiness (and Camp Coffee until recently) could maybe beat that as well?). |
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[[User:NeilW|NeilW]] 17:17, 23 December 2006 (UTC) |
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That death was from improper labelling and disclosure of ingredients along with their manufacturing conditions. Yet HG1 still seems to be treated as a trade secret and is only vaguely described as a starch containing some amount of milk protein. |
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:The BBC article is clear that it's the packaging from 1885: presumably the others have changed too much to qualify. . [[User:Dave souza|dave souza]], [[User talk:Dave souza|talk]] 20:42, 23 December 2006 (UTC) |
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If anyone has a source for HG1's composition I'd interested to see it. Trade secrets don't have the trademark/copyright/patent restrictions that would complicate their disclosure on Wikipedia. [[User:BeardedChimp|BeardedChimp]] ([[User talk:BeardedChimp|talk]]) 02:36, 4 February 2023 (UTC) |
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::The BBC article is confused as there is a difference between brand (of which many predate T&L) and the tin design (of which it may be the oldest packaging) Sadly the requirement of Wikipedia is verifibility and not truth or facts (which is a fundamental and monumentally stupid flaw) so the reference is permitted in the bizzare world that is Wikipedia. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/119.224.42.88|119.224.42.88]] ([[User talk:119.224.42.88|talk]]) 01:06, 16 November 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
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== Silly controversy == |
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[[Special:Contributions/208.50.89.58|208.50.89.58]] ([[User talk:208.50.89.58|talk]]) 10:53, 12 March 2010 (UTC) |
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There seems to be some attempt to confect a 'controversy' about this company because of a death resulting from a mislabeled product. But if you look at the events in RS (say ''The Guardian''[https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/sep/22/celia-marsh-how-did-a-vegan-flatbread-in-pret-a-manger-come-to-contain-milk-protein]) it says Tate & Lyle just supplied what they were contracted, and assumptions/assurances took place further down the supply chain from other parties. [[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 12:26, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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==Edit request== |
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Hi, Subject to the conflicts of interest rule, I can not edit this page. However, I would appreciate someone updating some of the facts listed on the page as follows: |
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:Firstly please observe [[WP:BRD]]. You should not delete material a second time until the issue has been resolved. Secondly Tate & Lyle should and must take responsibility for its own supply chain. Of course, Tate & Lyle supplied what they were contracted for. However they failed to ensure that the supply chain supplied a safe product. Hence they were criticised at the inquest. Thirdly please change the heading: the death of an individual is a serious matter and not a "silly controversy". [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 12:35, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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In 4th paragraph of 'History' should be changed to the following text, all referenced from the History page of their website <ref>http://www.tateandlyle.com/TateAndLyle/our_business/history/history_timeline.htm</ref> - In 1988 it acquired a 90% stake in A. E. Staley, a US corn processing business and in 1998 it brought Haarmann & Reimer, a citric acid producer. In 2000 it acquired the remaining minorities of Amylum and A. E. Staley. |
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::What? Tate and Lyle's supply chain is not at issue (presumably raw ingredients like tapioca). It's the onward supply chain which is the issue, which is outside T&L's control. What we had was misleading since Wikipedia was saying{{talkquote|HG1 manufactured by Tate & Lyle’s plant in north Wales was supplied as "dairy-free"}}when in fact that "dairy free" claim was apparently made by an intermediate company (Coyo) while T&L had suppled the stuff labeled as potentially containing allergens. Where's the controversy (for T&L anyway)? [[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 12:42, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::According to the BBC, "The yoghurt produced by Planet Coconut contained starch supplied by Tate & Lyle PLC, the inquest heard. The starch was identified as the possible source of the contamination." Are you disputing that? [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 12:56, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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In the first paragraph of 'Operations' it should say the company operates over 45 production facilities (not 50) and A.E.Staley should be changed to read "Food and Industrial Ingredients Americas (formally A.E. Staley)" |
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::::Well, only in as much as it wasn't the "possible" contaminant, it was traces of milk in that starch which was <u>established</u> as causing the death of Celia Marsh. That is not at issue. The issue is that since the starch was not dairy-free, making a product from it claiming to be dairy free had fatal consequences. As the coroner[https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/somerset-news/celia-marsh-pret-manger-death-7614045] found{{talkquote|"A product that is marked as dairy-free should be completely free from dairy. HG1 starch had been contaminated in its manufacturing process. It had been labelled to signal this risk, but this risk was not passed on to its customers."}}and as Pret a Manger said{{talkquote|We fully support the coroner’s findings. As the coroner made clear, Planet Coconut had information which should have alerted them that their CoYo yoghurt may have contained milk and this information was not passed on to Pret. It goes without saying that if Pret had ever known that the CoYo yoghurt may have contained milk, we would have never used the ingredient.}} Nobody seems to think this was T&L's responsibility except Wikipedia. (Add: The only legal action - later dropped - stemming from this case was against Planet Coconut and [[Pret a Manger]].[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-62397159] and it is Pret's failure to audit suppliers which is how RS is generally casting this piece of news). [[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 13:16, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::Wikipedia does not "think": we simply build an encyclopaedia from secondary sources. And the BBC has reported that the starch supplied by Tate & Lyle was the possible source of the contamination. You do not seem to be disputing the BBC statement so will you please (i) restore the material (I am OK for you to expand it to reflect the points that you have made which I acknowledge) (ii) please observe [[WP:BRD]] in future (it should never have been removed a second time) and (iii) amend the insensitive heading. Thank you. [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 14:09, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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In see also, the references to Redpath Sugar and Western Sugar Cooperative should be removed - they are no longer associated with Tate & Lyle. |
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::::::I would object to inclusion of this content as it tells us nothing about Tate and Lyle and is misleading. We don't have secondary sources with respect to Tate and Lyle's role, only [[WP:PRIMARYNEWS]] and since it seems everybody agrees on what happened there is no "controversy" and framing it as such is inane POV. [[WP:BRD]] is good to ignore when it bakes bad content in. The relevant <u>policy</u> ([[WP:VNOT]]) says "The responsibility for achieving consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content".[[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 14:14, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::::OK. So to summarise (i) you refuse to accept the inclusion of any properly sourced information on this matter (not even the words in the BBC article which you do not seem to dispute) (ii) you do not accept the application of [[WP:BRD]] and believe that you have the right to repeatedly delete the material time again just because you don't agree with it and (iii) you refuse to amend the offensive heading. I will now leave this matter for others to consider. [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 15:43, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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In external links, I don't understand why there is a link to a biography of 'Carl I. Hagen - he has nothing to do with T&L as far as I am aware - can anyone spread any light on this? |
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::::::::If there were "properly sourced information on this matter" then it might be includable, but probably not here in a [[WP:CSECTION]] since Tate and Lyle are incidental to what happened, and it is not a "controversy" for them since it seems inasmuch as they're mentioned, everybody agrees they acted with propriety. Later BBC reports don't even mention them.[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-63037929] Maybe in time some analysis might appear in a legal journal, food standards publication, etc. [[User:Bon courage|Bon courage]] ([[User talk:Bon courage|talk]]) 16:32, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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:::::::::As I say, I will leave others to consider. [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 16:47, 3 June 2023 (UTC) |
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Many thanks |
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[[Special:Contributions/208.50.89.58|208.50.89.58]] ([[User talk:208.50.89.58|talk]]) 10:53, 12 March 2010 (UTC) |
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:amended as requested except that the operations section already reads as you had intended so I have not touched it. Please clarify if further edits are needed [[User:Dormskirk|Dormskirk]] ([[User talk:Dormskirk|talk]]) 23:14, 24 March 2010 (UTC) |
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{{reflist talk}} |
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== Sockpuppet vandalism(?) == |
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I don't know how to report abusive users but I want to warn people who watch this page that an editor put a non pertinent unsourced sentence about the Atlantic Slave Trade in the lede and when i reverted it a different IP address with no history reverted my revert. The second reversion has been fixed by a bot so no harm done. |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/2.99.75.127 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/92.20.65.219 |
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[[User:Azkm|Azkm]] ([[User talk:Azkm|talk]]) 16:02, 5 June 2015 (UTC) |
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:The same edits continue and have been reverted again. I'll request page protection if it persists. [[User:Deli nk|Deli nk]] ([[User talk:Deli nk|talk]]) 13:17, 10 June 2015 (UTC) |
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==British Based?== |
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This needs to be distinguished from the US owned company Tate and Lyle Sugars part of [[American Sugar Refining]] headquartered in West Palm Beach, FLA. At the very least the name of the page should be changed to Tate & Lyle '''PLC''' as it is dealing with the company not the brand name. [[User:Hmcst1|Hmcst1]] ([[User talk:Hmcst1|talk]]) 16:09, 1 October 2017 (UTC) |
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Stabiliser called HG1
I tried to find out what HG1 actually is and only found article after article discussing the death and it as this mysterious ingredient. The linked source has:
> Eaton said when they had signed the licence agreement, Gosling told Planet Coconut about “his secret ingredient” – a stabiliser called HG1 designed with the food giant Tate & Lyle’s Australian subsidiary. “He was very protective of his recipe,” she said.
Even this coroner inquest ttps://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Celia-Marsh-Prevention-of-future-deaths-report-2022-0379_Published.pdf is vague
> The contamination arose because an ingredient in the yogurt called HG1 had become cross-contaminated with milk protein during its manufacture
That death was from improper labelling and disclosure of ingredients along with their manufacturing conditions. Yet HG1 still seems to be treated as a trade secret and is only vaguely described as a starch containing some amount of milk protein.
If anyone has a source for HG1's composition I'd interested to see it. Trade secrets don't have the trademark/copyright/patent restrictions that would complicate their disclosure on Wikipedia. BeardedChimp (talk) 02:36, 4 February 2023 (UTC)
Silly controversy
There seems to be some attempt to confect a 'controversy' about this company because of a death resulting from a mislabeled product. But if you look at the events in RS (say The Guardian[1]) it says Tate & Lyle just supplied what they were contracted, and assumptions/assurances took place further down the supply chain from other parties. Bon courage (talk) 12:26, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- Firstly please observe WP:BRD. You should not delete material a second time until the issue has been resolved. Secondly Tate & Lyle should and must take responsibility for its own supply chain. Of course, Tate & Lyle supplied what they were contracted for. However they failed to ensure that the supply chain supplied a safe product. Hence they were criticised at the inquest. Thirdly please change the heading: the death of an individual is a serious matter and not a "silly controversy". Dormskirk (talk) 12:35, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- What? Tate and Lyle's supply chain is not at issue (presumably raw ingredients like tapioca). It's the onward supply chain which is the issue, which is outside T&L's control. What we had was misleading since Wikipedia was saying
when in fact that "dairy free" claim was apparently made by an intermediate company (Coyo) while T&L had suppled the stuff labeled as potentially containing allergens. Where's the controversy (for T&L anyway)? Bon courage (talk) 12:42, 3 June 2023 (UTC)HG1 manufactured by Tate & Lyle’s plant in north Wales was supplied as "dairy-free"
- According to the BBC, "The yoghurt produced by Planet Coconut contained starch supplied by Tate & Lyle PLC, the inquest heard. The starch was identified as the possible source of the contamination." Are you disputing that? Dormskirk (talk) 12:56, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- Well, only in as much as it wasn't the "possible" contaminant, it was traces of milk in that starch which was established as causing the death of Celia Marsh. That is not at issue. The issue is that since the starch was not dairy-free, making a product from it claiming to be dairy free had fatal consequences. As the coroner[2] found
and as Pret a Manger said"A product that is marked as dairy-free should be completely free from dairy. HG1 starch had been contaminated in its manufacturing process. It had been labelled to signal this risk, but this risk was not passed on to its customers."
Nobody seems to think this was T&L's responsibility except Wikipedia. (Add: The only legal action - later dropped - stemming from this case was against Planet Coconut and Pret a Manger.[3] and it is Pret's failure to audit suppliers which is how RS is generally casting this piece of news). Bon courage (talk) 13:16, 3 June 2023 (UTC)We fully support the coroner’s findings. As the coroner made clear, Planet Coconut had information which should have alerted them that their CoYo yoghurt may have contained milk and this information was not passed on to Pret. It goes without saying that if Pret had ever known that the CoYo yoghurt may have contained milk, we would have never used the ingredient.
- Wikipedia does not "think": we simply build an encyclopaedia from secondary sources. And the BBC has reported that the starch supplied by Tate & Lyle was the possible source of the contamination. You do not seem to be disputing the BBC statement so will you please (i) restore the material (I am OK for you to expand it to reflect the points that you have made which I acknowledge) (ii) please observe WP:BRD in future (it should never have been removed a second time) and (iii) amend the insensitive heading. Thank you. Dormskirk (talk) 14:09, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- I would object to inclusion of this content as it tells us nothing about Tate and Lyle and is misleading. We don't have secondary sources with respect to Tate and Lyle's role, only WP:PRIMARYNEWS and since it seems everybody agrees on what happened there is no "controversy" and framing it as such is inane POV. WP:BRD is good to ignore when it bakes bad content in. The relevant policy (WP:VNOT) says "The responsibility for achieving consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content".Bon courage (talk) 14:14, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- OK. So to summarise (i) you refuse to accept the inclusion of any properly sourced information on this matter (not even the words in the BBC article which you do not seem to dispute) (ii) you do not accept the application of WP:BRD and believe that you have the right to repeatedly delete the material time again just because you don't agree with it and (iii) you refuse to amend the offensive heading. I will now leave this matter for others to consider. Dormskirk (talk) 15:43, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- If there were "properly sourced information on this matter" then it might be includable, but probably not here in a WP:CSECTION since Tate and Lyle are incidental to what happened, and it is not a "controversy" for them since it seems inasmuch as they're mentioned, everybody agrees they acted with propriety. Later BBC reports don't even mention them.[4] Maybe in time some analysis might appear in a legal journal, food standards publication, etc. Bon courage (talk) 16:32, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- As I say, I will leave others to consider. Dormskirk (talk) 16:47, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- If there were "properly sourced information on this matter" then it might be includable, but probably not here in a WP:CSECTION since Tate and Lyle are incidental to what happened, and it is not a "controversy" for them since it seems inasmuch as they're mentioned, everybody agrees they acted with propriety. Later BBC reports don't even mention them.[4] Maybe in time some analysis might appear in a legal journal, food standards publication, etc. Bon courage (talk) 16:32, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- OK. So to summarise (i) you refuse to accept the inclusion of any properly sourced information on this matter (not even the words in the BBC article which you do not seem to dispute) (ii) you do not accept the application of WP:BRD and believe that you have the right to repeatedly delete the material time again just because you don't agree with it and (iii) you refuse to amend the offensive heading. I will now leave this matter for others to consider. Dormskirk (talk) 15:43, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- I would object to inclusion of this content as it tells us nothing about Tate and Lyle and is misleading. We don't have secondary sources with respect to Tate and Lyle's role, only WP:PRIMARYNEWS and since it seems everybody agrees on what happened there is no "controversy" and framing it as such is inane POV. WP:BRD is good to ignore when it bakes bad content in. The relevant policy (WP:VNOT) says "The responsibility for achieving consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content".Bon courage (talk) 14:14, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- Wikipedia does not "think": we simply build an encyclopaedia from secondary sources. And the BBC has reported that the starch supplied by Tate & Lyle was the possible source of the contamination. You do not seem to be disputing the BBC statement so will you please (i) restore the material (I am OK for you to expand it to reflect the points that you have made which I acknowledge) (ii) please observe WP:BRD in future (it should never have been removed a second time) and (iii) amend the insensitive heading. Thank you. Dormskirk (talk) 14:09, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- Well, only in as much as it wasn't the "possible" contaminant, it was traces of milk in that starch which was established as causing the death of Celia Marsh. That is not at issue. The issue is that since the starch was not dairy-free, making a product from it claiming to be dairy free had fatal consequences. As the coroner[2] found
- According to the BBC, "The yoghurt produced by Planet Coconut contained starch supplied by Tate & Lyle PLC, the inquest heard. The starch was identified as the possible source of the contamination." Are you disputing that? Dormskirk (talk) 12:56, 3 June 2023 (UTC)
- What? Tate and Lyle's supply chain is not at issue (presumably raw ingredients like tapioca). It's the onward supply chain which is the issue, which is outside T&L's control. What we had was misleading since Wikipedia was saying
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