Subway to Remove Chemical From Sandwich Bread Following Blogger's Protest When it comes to fast food, this health blogger gets chains to make changes -- fast.

By Kate Taylor

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

When health blogger Vani Hari says something, franchises listen. So, when the "Food Babe" started a petition for Subway to remove chemicals from its bread, the sandwich chain got the wheels of change spinning fast.

On Feb. 4, Hari began an online petition to stop Subway's use of azodicarbonamide in its bread. Azodicarbonamide is a chemical also used in yoga mats and shoe rubber regarded as "safe" by the FDA, but banned in Europe and Australia due to links to respiratory issues and allergies.

One day later, on Feb. 5, Subway responded saying it was in the processes of removing the chemical from its sandwich breads. The efforts had apparently already been in progress. However, national coverage of the issue seems likely to have brought efforts into the spotlight and may speed up the process.

Related: CVS to Quit Selling Tobacco Products

Over 65,000 supporters signed Hari's petition in its first two day. Following Subway's announcement that they would be cutting the chemical, Hari encouraged her supporters to continue their protest, despite the encouraging news. "Subway refuses to elaborate on timeline," she tweeted. "Don't eat it until they change it!"

This isn't the first time Hari has pressured franchises to make healthier changes to their menus. She worked with Chick-fil-A throughout the process of removing unhealthy and artificial ingredients from products. Hari's also taken on Pinkberry, Chipotle, Jason's Deli and other companies she feels need to up their nutritional standards.

Related: Chick-fil-A Removes Corn Syrup From Products After Blogger Takedown

Kate Taylor

Reporter

Kate Taylor is a reporter at Business Insider. She was previously a reporter at Entrepreneur. Get in touch with tips and feedback on Twitter at @Kate_H_Taylor. 

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business Plans

She Wrote An 'Escape Plan' to Quit Her Job and Move to an Island. Now She's There Generating Nearly $300,000 A Year

"My detailed, step-by-step plan on how I would quit my job and move to a Caribbean island."

Side Hustle

She Had Side Hustles Flipping Beanie Babies and Christmas Presents. Then the 'Unconventional' Path Led to a Multimillion-Dollar Company of Her Own.

Ashley Tyrner, founder and CEO of FarmboxRx, transformed early business lessons into a health-equity company.

Fundraising

Would You Give This Former Hacker Your Money?

On the new episode of "Elevator Pitch," our investors need to contend with some serious trust issues.

Business Plans

How You Can Use the 80/20 Rule to Unlock Success and Maximize Your Impact

Our success is determined by where we focus our efforts.