Quick answer: Azodicarbonamide carries the heavier risk profile. Azodicarbonamide is banned in the EU and allowed in the US; Mercury compounds is banned in the EU and allowed in the US.
| Property | Azodicarbonamide | Mercury compounds |
|---|---|---|
| EU status | Banned | Banned |
| US status | Allowed | Allowed |
| Risk level | high | high |
| Banned in | European Union, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore | European Union |
| Restricted in | Canada (not approved for food use) | — |
| Category | additive | heavy metal |
| Where it hides | — | skin-lightening cream, mascara |
Azodicarbonamide (ADA) is a synthetic chemical used in the food industry as a flour bleaching agent and dough conditioner, and industrially as a blowing agent in foam rubber and plastic production. Its chemical formula is C2H4N4O2. When it reacts with water or heat, it breaks down into biurea (primary product) and semicarbazide (SEM).
Mercury compounds is mercury and mercury salts used as preservatives and skin lighteners.
Azodicarbonamide: ADA's primary food safety concern is its breakdown to semicarbazide (SEM) during baking. In a 2002 study, SEM was found to increase the incidence of vascular tumors in female mice at high doses. This single animal finding was sufficient under the EU's precautionary principle to ban ADA in food use in 2005. The FDA conducted a comprehensive SEM exposure assessment in 2016, concluding that US population exposure to SEM from ADA-treated bread is many orders of magnitude below doses showing tumor effects in rodents and does not warrant regulatory change. This reflects the FDA's risk-based approach. Urethane (ethyl carbamate) is another potentially harmful breakdown product of ADA. Urethane is classified as an IARC Group 2A probable human carcinogen. Small amounts of urethane can form from SEM in fermented or alcohol-containing environments. The 2014 'yoga mat chemical' controversy highlighted ADA's dual use: it is the same chemical used as a blowing agent in foam rubber and plastic manufacturing — including yoga mats. Consumer advocacy blogger Vani Hari's 'Food Babe' campaign led over 50,000 people to petition Subway, which voluntarily removed ADA from its bread in 2014. The dual industrial-food use raised public concern even though ADA's behavior in each context is chemically different. From occupational health: workers exposed to ADA powder in bakery or plastic manufacturing settings can develop occupational asthma. WHO recognizes ADA as a respiratory sensitizer in occupational settings, though dietary exposure through bread is fundamentally different from inhalation exposure.
Mercury compounds: Mercury is a potent neurotoxin. Banned in EU cosmetics; the US limits it to trace levels but enforcement gaps allow contaminated imports.
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