HomeFood Safety Guides

What is Bovaer (3-NOP)? A Consumer's Guide to This Dairy Feed Additive

Updated April 14, 2026 · 8 min read

Contents

What is Bovaer?

Bovaer is the trade name for 3-nitrooxypropanol (3-NOP), a synthetic feed additive developed by the Dutch company DSM (now dsm-firmenich) to reduce methane emissions from cattle. When added to cow feed, Bovaer inhibits the enzyme responsible for methane production in the cow's digestive system, reducing methane emissions by approximately 30%.

Bovaer was first approved in the European Union in 2022 under EU regulation 2022/565 for use in dairy cattle feed. Since then, it has been adopted by a growing number of European dairy farms and is spreading to other markets including Australia, New Zealand, and parts of South America.

How Does Bovaer Work?

Cattle and other ruminants produce methane as a natural byproduct of their digestive process. Microorganisms in the cow's rumen (the first stomach) break down plant matter through a process called enteric fermentation, which produces methane gas that the cow then belches out.

Bovaer (3-NOP) works by targeting a specific enzyme called methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) in the methane-producing archaea (microorganisms) in the cow's rumen. By inhibiting this enzyme, Bovaer reduces — but does not eliminate — methane production.

Key facts about Bovaer's mechanism:

Regulatory Status Around the World

Bovaer's approval status varies significantly across different regions:

RegionStatusYear
European Union✅ Approved for dairy cattle2022
United Kingdom✅ Approved2023
Australia✅ Approved2023
New Zealand✅ Approved2023
Brazil✅ Approved2023
United States⏳ Under FDA review
Canada⏳ Under review
China❌ Not approved
Japan❌ Not approved
South Korea❌ Not approved
⚠️ Important: Even though Bovaer is not approved for use in China, Japan, or South Korea, dairy products from countries where Bovaer IS used (EU, Australia, NZ) are routinely imported into these Asian markets. This means consumers in Asia may be consuming dairy products from Bovaer-fed cows without clear labeling.

Why Are Consumers Concerned?

Consumer concerns about Bovaer generally fall into several categories:

1. Safety and Long-Term Studies

While regulatory bodies have approved Bovaer based on safety studies submitted by DSM, some consumers and advocacy groups have raised concerns about the relatively short period of long-term safety data available. The compound was first used commercially only in 2022, and some feel that more independent, long-term studies are needed.

2. Transparency and Labeling

Currently, there is no requirement in any market to label dairy products made from milk of Bovaer-fed cows. This means consumers have no way to know from the product label alone whether the milk in their cheese, butter, or yogurt came from cows that received Bovaer in their feed.

3. Consumer Choice

Many consumers — particularly in Asia — believe they should have the right to choose whether to consume products from animals given synthetic feed additives, regardless of whether those additives have been approved by regulators. This is especially true for products intended for children and infants.

4. Chemical Nature

3-NOP is a synthetic chemical compound, not a naturally occurring substance. Some consumers prefer products from animals fed only natural, traditional feed ingredients. The "clean label" movement, particularly strong in Japan and parts of Europe, advocates for minimizing synthetic inputs in the food chain.

Which Dairy Brands Are Linked to Bovaer?

The following major dairy brands or their parent companies have publicly disclosed use of, or partnerships with, Bovaer/3-NOP technology. Note that use may vary by farm, region, and product line:

⚠️ Higher Risk (confirmed partnerships or trials):
⚡ Moderate Risk (industry involvement, not all farms):

This list is based on publicly available information from company sustainability reports, industry press releases, and regulatory filings. PureBasket continuously updates this data as new information becomes available.

How to Check if Your Dairy Products Are Affected

Since there is no mandatory labeling for Bovaer, checking whether your dairy products are affected requires some detective work:

  1. Use PureBasket: Our app scans product barcodes and checks the brand against our database of Bovaer-linked companies. Download free on Google Play or the App Store.
  2. Check the brand's country of origin: Products from EU countries, UK, Australia, and New Zealand have a higher chance of being from Bovaer-using farms.
  3. Look for organic certification: Organic dairy products are less likely to use Bovaer, as many organic certification bodies have not yet approved it for organic production.
  4. Contact the manufacturer: Some companies will disclose their stance on Bovaer if asked directly.
  5. Check the brand's sustainability reports: Companies using Bovaer often mention it in their annual sustainability or ESG reports as a methane reduction initiative.
✅ Tip: Products with organic certification (EU Organic, USDA Organic, JAS Organic) are generally considered lower risk for Bovaer exposure, as Bovaer use in organic farming is restricted in most certification programs.

The Bottom Line

Bovaer is an approved feed additive in many Western countries that aims to address a genuine environmental problem — cattle methane emissions contribute significantly to greenhouse gas levels. Regulatory bodies that have approved it have determined it to be safe based on available evidence.

However, the lack of consumer labeling and the relatively recent introduction of the compound mean that many informed consumers — particularly in markets where Bovaer is not approved — prefer to have the choice of avoiding products linked to Bovaer use.

PureBasket helps bridge this information gap by identifying brands and products linked to Bovaer, giving you the information you need to make your own decision. We provide data, not judgment — because we believe informed consumers make better choices.