An investigation by RTS has revealed that infant formula sold in Switzerland contains traces of cereulide, a toxin known to cause vomiting and diarrhoea in babies, raising serious questions about current European food-safety thresholds and testing methods.

"Exposure below this level is not expected to harm healthy infants."
"The EFSA value is the result of a rapid risk assessment carrying the status of a recommendation rather than a definitive safety limit."
A staggering 10% of infant formula samples tested in Switzerland contain traces of cereulide, a potent toxin that triggers violent vomiting and diarrhoea in infants. This alarming discovery, unearthed by an RTS investigation, confirms that despite a massive European contamination scandal earlier this year, tainted products remain on Swiss supermarket shelves. In March 2026, the Geneva cantonal chemist identified six specific products positive for the toxin, yet no recalls followed. Swiss parents are currently purchasing these products, unknowingly feeding their children substances that have bypassed traditional safety nets. The crisis strikes at the heart of consumer trust in a nation that prides itself on the highest food-safety standards. While the concentrations remain below current emergency limits, the mere presence of a known emetic toxin in infant nutrition is a critical failure of the system. The Federal Food Safety and Veterinary Office (FSVO) now grapples with a public health dilemma: allow the sale to continue or enforce a zero-tolerance policy that could disrupt the entire supply chain.
Safety limits for cereulide are not built on decades of peer-reviewed science; they are 'emergency' values born from crisis management. The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) established these thresholds through an expedited assessment, a move that many experts now view with skepticism. Internal documents obtained by RTS reveal a startling rift: the Swiss FSVO privately admitted to Danone that it does not share the company's interpretation of these limits. The agency described the EFSA value as a mere 'recommendation' rather than a definitive safety boundary. This admission suggests that the legal basis for keeping these products on the market is built on quicksand. While the FSVO publicly maintains that healthy infants are safe below these levels, the lack of scientific consensus on repeated, low-dose exposure creates an unprecedented risk. Switzerland is not bound by EU interpretations, yet it continues to lean on these fragile European metrics while manufacturers investigate the source of contamination—arachidonic acid (ARA) oil. The disconnect between private caution and public inaction is widening.
The true scale of the contamination may be far worse than initially reported due to a fundamental error in laboratory protocols. For months, regulators and manufacturers across Europe tested dry powder, failing to account for the fact that cereulide is encapsulated in microscopic oil droplets. These droplets only release their toxic payload once the powder is mixed with water. Sciensano, the Belgian reference laboratory, has dropped a bombshell: testing reconstituted formula can detect between 35 and 135 times more toxin than testing dry powder. This means previous safety clearances were likely based on massive underestimations. Although the European Commission urged a change in methods on January 30th, the damage to public confidence is already done. Switzerland only began its national testing on February 6th, narrowly avoiding the protocol error, but the international data used to set safety 'norms' remains tainted by these flawed dry-powder analyses. We are effectively flying blind, using skewed data to justify the presence of toxins in our children's food.
Industry titans are now forced to respond to the RTS revelations. Nestlé has publicly acknowledged the technical limitations of current analytical methods, stating an ambitious goal to eliminate cereulide entirely from its production lines. Hochdorf has echoed this commitment, signaling a shift toward more rigorous internal standards. In contrast, Danone has remained notably less forthcoming despite repeated requests for clarity. The contamination has been traced back to arachidonic acid (ARA) oil, an additive essential for infant development but now identified as the 'Trojan horse' bringing toxins into the factory. Manufacturers have been instructed by Swiss authorities to strengthen their production processes immediately. However, the 'voluntary' nature of these improvements offers little comfort to consumers. While corporations scramble to fix their supply chains, the financial implications of a total recall loom large. The industry is at a crossroads: prioritize the bottom line by adhering to 'emergency' limits, or take the lead in safety by pulling every tainted tin from the shelves.
Switzerland stands at a critical juncture in food safety and consumer protection. The RTS investigation has pulled back the curtain on a system that prioritizes regulatory convenience over absolute infant safety. Moving forward, the FSVO must decide if it will continue to follow 'recommendations' from abroad or establish a uniquely Swiss standard that reflects the nation's commitment to excellence. The implications are clear: current testing methods must be standardized across all cantons to ensure every bottle of formula is safe, not just 'legally compliant.' Parents deserve full transparency, including clear labeling when a product contains traces of toxins, regardless of whether they fall below an arbitrary threshold. As the scientific community debates the long-term effects of cereulide exposure, the Swiss public is unlikely to accept further ambiguity. The era of 'rapid risk assessments' must end, replaced by a robust, transparent framework that puts the health of the next generation above all else. The eyes of the nation are now on the regulators to see if they will act before the next scandal breaks.