Pet Truck Ltd ethos is to increase customer awareness of the main source of life for pets...THEIR FOOD !! As part of our commitment to ONLY Promote Quality Foods and Treats to enable your pet to have a active and healthy life...If your pet is happy...So are You !!
Our intention is to highlight the ingredients of the many well known and well financed foods (Multi Million Pound Advertisements) that we see everyday and every time we shop in our favourite supermarkets / pet stores.
Many stores promote themselves as quality suppliers of pet foods when some of the brands they are selling are far from quality products...over the next few months we will be sharing our investigations into both Cat and Dog foods so that you can see and hopefully change to a better food that doesn't cost the earth to feed.
Daily Mail Article:
The pet food swindle: Popular brands contain high quantities of meat that is not on the label including tins of 'beef' that are really up to 63 per cent chicken
- Research shows many popular tinned foods contain meat not on the label
- Of 17 pet foods tested, 14 contained meats that were not spelled out on can
- Pedigree dog food labelled ‘with beef’ had more chicken and pork than beef
- Complied with law allowing phrase ‘with beef’ even if it's not the main meat
Whether it is tasty beef or succulent chicken, only the best will do for our beloved pets. But many dog and cat foods are not all they seem.
Research by vets has shown many popular tinned foods contain high quantities of meat not on the label.
One beef stew dog food was found to be predominantly chicken.
Of the 17 pet foods subjected to DNA testing at Nottingham University, 14 contained meats that were not spelled out on the can.
As good as it looks? 63 per cent of meat detected in Bakers As Good As It Looks Succulent Stew ‘with beef’ was chicken and 22 per cent was pork. Only 15 per cent was beef
Researcher Kin-Chow Chang, a fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, said misleading labelling could put dogs and cats at risk of serious allergic reactions.
Latest figures show Britons spend £1billion a year on more than 400,000 tons of tinned pet food. More than three quarters of the nation’s eight million cats and almost half of the nine million dogs eat canned food.
Professor Chang tested ten popular dog foods and seven types of cat food for DNA of cows, pigs, chickens and horses.
None of the tins had horsemeat in them, but most contained beef, pork or chicken despite it not being mentioned on the label. Some of the ‘beef’ foods actually contained more pork or chicken.
For instance, 63 per cent of meat detected in Bakers As Good As It Looks Succulent Stew ‘with beef’ was chicken and 22 per cent was pork. Only 15 per cent was beef.
But not all brands were criticised – all of Encore’s chicken breast cat food was determined to be the meat labelled.
Professor Chang said the research suggested ‘a considerable mismatch in the labelling standard of the pet food industry and what the purchaser would reasonably expect’.
He added: ‘In a human situation, this would be completely unacceptable. If I was to buy a tin of ham, I wouldn’t want to be eating rabbit as well.’
The foods complied with the law, which allows the phrase ‘with beef’, even if beef is not the main meat.
But writing in journal Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica, Professor Chang called on manufacturers to make labels clearer, allowing ‘more informed choices … particularly important for pets with food allergies, reduce the risk of product misinterpretation … and avoid potential religious concerns’.
Cats Protection’s Maggie Roberts said pet food makers follow guidance laid down by the EU, adding: ‘It may be beneficial for these guidelines to be amended so the information is clearer … to allow people to make a more informed choice.’
The Pet Food Manufacturers Association said makers may use meat from different animals as supply levels fluctuate but the nutritional quality does not vary.
Pet Truck Ltd....One of the reasons why we only promote quality foods !!