Audio By Carbonatix
UK mattress companies Silent Night and newly-listed Eve Sleep have had to halt production at factories after being told there was a risk of excessive levels of a carcinogenic ingredient in its foam mattresses.
German chemicals giant BASF wrote to mattress makers and 48 other companies earlier this week to say that it had found that an ingredient it produced, TDI, contained unusually high levels of toxic ingredient dichlorobenzen following a "technical error".
Dichlorobenzene is an organic compound that is toxic to water organisms and can cause irritation of eyes, skin and respiratory tract in humans and is suspected of causing cancer, the company said.
TDI is a chemical precursor needed to make upholstery in furniture, such as foam mattresses and car seats.
Silent Night shut down production at one of its factories to perform emergency checks on its mattresses while it investigated the situation.

Former Prime Minister David Cameron visiting a Silent Night factory
"Following this thorough investigation, we can confirm that there has been no impact whatsoever on the quality or safety of any products manufactured at our Silentnight Group sites," a Silent Night spokesman said. "While we have now resumed manufacturing, there is likely to be some disruption in the short term."
Meanwhile, Eve Sleep is understood to have halted production at the German factory which supplies the company while checks were performed.
"Eve’s UK and French products are produced in the UK using a separate supply route and were therefore never potentially affected," said a spokesman. "As a precaution, manufacturing was suspended immediately at the German factory, which supplies Eve’s European customers (excluding the UK and France). We can now confirm that all our products are completely unaffected and absolutely safe for customers.”
Rival Simba Sleep, which sells memory foam mattresses, said that initial checks found that it would not be affected by the cancer scare.
BASF said that it had now conducted initial tests on the foams with higher levels of the toxic ingredient. It found that "health hazards are not anticipated for consumers" and that two-thirds of the foam had not been processed through supply chains.
"The withdrawal of the product has started in close cooperation with the customers," the company said. "BASF is in close contact with the relevant associations for mattresses and foam producers in order to find a solution as quickly as possible."
Latest Stories
-
Officials behind Weija spillway permits will be sacked – Mahama
21 minutes -
Energy sector still needed GH¢12.9bn in gov’t support despite higher ESLA levy in 2025 – Finance Ministry
23 minutes -
Fidelity Bank deepens growth Momentum with Strong 2025 Performance
26 minutes -
Ghana, South Korea sign visa waiver deal for diplomatic and service passport holders
29 minutes -
Accra Academy @ 95: Nana Oye celebrates legacy, backs major infrastructure drive
32 minutes -
Foreign national killed after being hit by bus at Pedu Junction
40 minutes -
Speaker Bagbin to convene African parliamentary leaders at 10th GITFiC in Accra
41 minutes -
NPA urges motorists to verify fuel purchases, demand receipts
43 minutes -
Daniel Acquaye leads Agri-Impact Delegation to Ghana-UK Investment Summit in London
47 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ Bill: Brace up for consequences – Ho Central MP to Ghanaians
49 minutes -
Xenophobic attacks threaten Africa’s unity agenda – Mahama
52 minutes -
Gov’t to buy 2026 World Cup tickets for Ghanaians abroad to support Black Stars – Mahama
55 minutes -
SellQuic launches Ghana’s premier online AI assistant to responds to every customer instantly
59 minutes -
Mahama rules out funding large-scale fan travel to 2026 World Cup
1 hour -
Ghana to deploy 400 nurses to Jamaica under new bilateral agreement
1 hour