NPC Welcomes DGAC Rejection of Potato Interchangeability; Bewildered by Recommendation to Cut Vegetable Consumption

Potato industry urges USDA and HHS Secretaries to discard unscientific recommendations in final DGA report


The National Potato Council (NPC) today responded to unscientific recommendations by the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC), which encourages Americans to eat fewer starchy vegetables, despite data showing that consumers do not eat enough vegetables. 

Kam Quarles, NPC CEO, said, “The National Potato Council has commented extensively on all elements of the Dietary Guidelines process, demonstrating the nutritional and economic value that America’s favorite vegetable plays in all diets. While the advisory committee acknowledges the overwhelming and clear evidence that Americans do not eat enough vegetables, the panel’s report reduces the starchy vegetable consumption recommendation. This conclusion is unsupported by nutritional science and will confuse consumers. Instead of reducing recommendations for any vegetable, USDA and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) should focus on increasing Americans’ intake of vegetables overall. As USDA and HHS work to complete the 2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, we urge the two Secretaries to discard this erroneous recommendation in any final report.” 

Meanwhile, NPC welcomed the Advisory Committee’s abandonment of an attempt to make starchy vegetables interchangeable with grains within its recommendations – a notion brought up during the DGAC’s deliberations.  

“Potatoes are a vegetable. Period. Despite some initial views to the contrary, we are pleased the full committee rejected attempts to place potatoes and other starchy vegetables in a different food category. Doing so would have made potatoes less affordable for schools and other feeding program managers who struggle to put nutritious, cost-effective, and appealing vegetables on Americans’ plates,” Quarles concluded.