Avid diet coke drinker, President Trump served drinks at his inauguration luncheon.
The Coca-Cola distributor recalls more than 10,000 soda bottles spanning Illinois and Wisconsin.
The recall began on March 6, according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). On March 24th, the FDA reclassified the recall as Class II. This is the second highest risk classification.
12 packs of 864 Coca-Cola have been recalled. This means that 10,368 cans of beloved soda are at risk of containing plastic.
The recall only relates to a pack of 12 Coca-Cola drinks with UPC codes of 0 49000-00634 6 or 0 49000-02890 4.
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The Coca-Cola Co. logo will appear on Thursday, October 13th, 2011 on a box of soda for sale at the Target Corp. Store in Rosemont, Illinois, USA. (Getty Images/Tim Boyle via Getty Images/Bloomberg)
The FDA lists the reasons for the recall as “foreign substances (plastics)” but is not given a reason for how the drink is contaminated.
Class II recalls include products that are “are likely to cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health effects, or are far away with the probability of serious adverse effects.”
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Sign outside the Coca-Cola Bottling Factory in Albany, New York, USA on Tuesday, January 30th, 2024. Coca-Cola is scheduled to announce its return on February 13th. (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Coca-Cola recalls are rare, but not unheard of. In January, the company recalled “all variants” of multiple beverages produced at its Belgian facility “due to excessively high chlorate content,” and “due to all chlorate content,” but the recall only affected certain European consumers.
December 2023, 2,000 cases Coca-Cola Products The risks of “potential foreign materials” were recalled. of Approximately 2,000 recalled casesof which 1,557 were Sprites, while others were Fanta and Diet Cola.
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On Tuesday, December 5th, 2023, a wrapped Coca-Cola bottle will move along the packaging line at Danaharasty Coca-Cola HBC Bottling Plant in Hungary. (Akos Stiller / Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Fox Business reached out to Coca-Cola for additional comment.
Aislinn Murphy and Pilar Arias from Fox Business contributed to this report.