Chicago - McDonald's has finally selected a new trans-fat-free oil for cooking its famous french fries after years of testing, the fast-food chain said on Monday.
While it has developed a healthier new oil, the company is still not saying when it will be used in restaurants. It already trails competitors in committing to a zero-trans fat oil.
Spokesperson Walt Riker said the oil is currently in more than 1 200 US restaurants after extensive testing, but declined to provide details on timing or locations.
"We can confirm that we've got the right oil," he said. "We're phasing it in."
The choice of a new oil comes as McDonald's and others face a July 1 deadline to begin complying with an ordinance passed by New York City last month making it the first US city to ban all restaurants from using artificial trans fats.
What's in it?
McDonald's has said for months it would comply with such a ban, and said it would introduce any new oil nationwide rather than have a separate oil for its New York restaurants. But it had not confirmed that testing was complete.
Riker said the new oil is canola-based and includes corn and soy oils.
Addressing long-held concerns that changing the oil could jeopardise the popular taste of its fries, he said: "We're very confident in our test and taste results. ... We're very confident in what we're hearing back from our customers."
The Chicago Tribune, which first reported McDonald's decision on a new oil on Sunday, said the company has tested 18 varieties of oil in more than 50 blends during the last seven years.
McDonald's had been under pressure for moving more slowly than smaller rivals Wendy's International Inc and Yum Brands's KFC and Taco Bell to rid its oil of the artery-clogging trans fats.
'Fries disastrous'
A public health advocate who has criticised McDonald's fries as nutritionally "disastrous" applauded its move toward a new oil.
"So many people eat there that making this change can really provide a significant benefit to the public's health," said Michael Jacobson, executive director of the nonprofit Centre for Science in the Public Interest.
"It also reconfirms with the restaurant industry that trans fat is a real problem and now even the biggest chain is beginning to deal with it. Hopefully now the smaller chains ... will also get rid of it."
The $22bn company was especially cautious after reneging within months on a September 2002 pledge to introduce a new oil, citing concerns about changing the taste of its fries.
"It's just taking a little bit of time because as we move forward we don't want to jeopardise the iconic nature of the french fry, which as you know is so very important to our brand," chief executive Jim Skinner told an investor conference in New York two months ago.
The company uses a healthier oil blend in some countries overseas but says regional differences in agricultural production require development of different blends.
Shares in the company rose 30c to close at $43.23 on the New York Stock Exchange.