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Stevita history thru past decades...
1986 - Stevia farmers
cooperative is formed in Maringa, Brazil, to gather stevia
leaves produced by small stevia leaves
farmers which were primarily
harvested from wild fields. These leaves were primarily exported to
Japan. The Japanese food industry had been using the stevia as a sweetener
since the early 1070;s.
1987 - Cooperative members and investors form Inga Stevia Industrial with the purpose
of domesticating the stevia plant and grow it on controlled farms. The same
year Inga Stevia Industrial started the
construction of an extraction factory that would use locally developed technology to extract the sweet crystals from
the leaves of the stevia plant.
1988 - The Stevita brand was introduced in the Brazilian market,
packaged in individual sachets, as a table top sweetener. During the same year,
Oscar Rodes, one of the representatives of Inga Industrial introduced the Stevita crystals into the US market as a
GRAS ( generally regard as safe)
food substance because of the proven record of safe human consumption
over centuries in South America. FDA
denied approval of the petition and
Stevita had to be removed from the market.
1990 - Inga Stevia Industrial
changes its name to Steviafarma S.A.
1994 - US Congress passes the
DSHEA act, thus allowing stevia to be
sold in the country but only as "dietary supplement".
1995 - Oscar Rodes started selling Stevita's pure crystals ( Steviol-glycosides
) to the food industry in the USA.
1996 - Stevita Co. Inc. is
formed in the USA and makes the first importation of Stevita products labeled as dietary supplement to be sold
directly to local consumers. The first
shipment is confiscated by FDA because
the appearance of the word "sweet" on the label.
1997 - Various
inspections by FDA agents during the
year forced Stevita co. to remove from advertising material, labels, web pages,
any and all content that referred to Stevia as been sweet.
1998 -During one of the FDA inspections in the year, Stevita Co.
was ordered to destroy ( burn) books about
stevia that the company was selling
along with the stevia products. Their argument was that information in the
books referred to stevia as been sweet and used as a sweetener, thus, rendering
the stevia products contaminated because stevia
could be used only as a dietary supplement and not as a sweetener.
Stevita was shut down over a period of 4 months as a result of this dispute.
1999 - 2008 - The possibility of been closed down because of the ever
FDA's close vigilance over Stevita's marketing practices ( never could say or
print the word "sweet") persisted throughout this period what
impaired the company's expansion in the
market.
2009 - With the approval of the Steviol-Glycosides ( 95% ) and
Rebaudioside 97% by the FDA, Stevita has reformulated its line of products to comply with the new regulations and be
able to market Stevita as sweeteners.
As conscientious stewards of the environment, we contribute to reforestation projects of native trees in Brazil.
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