Spierings says swifter action to sideline affected products might have occurred had he been informed earlier.
Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings says he wasn't informed of the contamination event that led to the company's botulism fiasco quickly enough and much swifter action to "sideline" affected consumer products might have taken place had he been told of the problem earlier.
The dairy co-operative, New Zealand's largest firm, first became aware of a possible "quality issue" with 38 tonnes of a whey protein called WPC80 in March this year.
Fronting a news conference in Auckland yesterday, Spierings said he didn't necessarily need to be informed of the problem at that point, but he should have been told at the end of June when Fonterra asked AgResearch to test the WPC80 for the presence of clostridium botulinum, a bacterium that can cause botulism.
Instead, he didn't find out about the contamination event until the evening of August 1, after test results suggested the botulism-causing bacteria could be present in three batches of WPC80 produced at Fonterra's Hautapu plant in the Waikato in May 2012.