MFT Group Praised for New Cage-Free Egg Policy
Private equity firm MFT Group won
praise today from international non-profit Lever Foundation for its new
commitment to source only cage-free eggs by 2025 for all of its food-related
brands.
MFT Group's portfolio includes financial services, real
estate, healthcare, and food and beverage brands. Its subsidiary Waterwoods
Group Corporation produces ready-to-eat products for several leading retail and
convenience chains in the Philippines, including FamilyMart. The Group also
operates Mimi & Bros in the Philippines, La Lola Churreria in Singapore,
and SaladStop! restaurants in Vietnam.
“Our company strives for excellence while always keeping an
eye on community impact and social responsibility. Committing to the finest
ingredients is paramount for us, which is why we have decided to switch to
using only cage-free eggs and egg ingredients by 2025 for all of our
food-related brands,” said Astrid Serrano, Head of F&B Operations for MFT
Group.
“We applaud MFT Group
for this important cage-free commitment,
which will benefit Filipino consumers, while also
improving the welfare of animals in the company’s supply chain," said Robyn del
Rosario, Sustainability Program Manager at Lever Foundation, which worked with MFT on its pledge. “MFT is the first fresh food
manufacturer in the Philippines to announce a cage-free commitment, and we
encourage other companies to follow MFT’s great example in order to protect
food safety and animal welfare.”
Leading animal protection and food safety
organizations worldwide encourage a switch to cage-free eggs, which are less
cruel to animals and safer for consumers. On caged egg farms, each egg-laying
hen is confined in a cage so small she can barely turn around for nearly her
entire life. Research
by the European Food Safety Authority and others has found that cage-free egg
farms are up to 25 times less likely to be contaminated with key salmonella
strains than hens raised in cages. Battery cage egg production has been banned
throughout the European Union as well as in Australia, New Zealand, the UK,
Canada, India, and parts of the United States.
Demand for cage-free eggs is
flourishing in the Philippines, spurred by consumer demand for healthier
options and concern for animal welfare. In recent
years a growing list of restaurant, hospitality, retail and packaged foods
brands have pledged to use only cage-free eggs in the country. In
response to the growing shift, in 2020 the Bureau of Agriculture and Fisheries
Standards (BAFS) initiated the development of a national Code of Practice (COP)
for Cage-free Egg Production, a comprehensive set of animal welfare guidelines
for the growing cage-free egg sector.
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