The crisp packaging of a British snack giant has become a silent whistleblower. Sources confirm that a shift to monochrome wrappers for a leading brand of crisps is not a marketing gimmick but a desperate response to a severed supply chain. The black ink used in their iconic logo originated from a single factory in Iran, now frozen by sanctions and internal collapse.
Documents obtained by this newsroom reveal a tangled web of payments. The snack company, headquartered in Reading, had for years sourced its ink from a Tehran-based supplier. The ink was prized for its deep, indelible black. But when the UK tightened sanctions on Iranian petrochemical exports in 2023, the supply dried up. The company’s logistics arm switched to a Chinese intermediary, but the ink quality plummeted. Bags printed with the replacement ink bled colour when exposed to humidity, leading to customer complaints and store returns.
The crisis deepened when auditors traced a series of payments from the snack giant’s Cayman Islands subsidiary to a dummy company in Dubai. That dummy company, shell records show, was a front for the same Iranian ink manufacturer. The payments were routed through a Turkish bank, bypassing sanctions. A former financial controller, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: “They knew. Everyone in the procurement team knew the ink was Iranian. They just didn’t care as long as the colour was right.”
The company’s response has been to strip its packaging of colour entirely. The new black-and-white design, launched last month, uses a domestically sourced ink from a supplier in Luton. But the move has done little to quell internal fears. A leaked memo from the company’s compliance officer warns that “the Iran link may have exposed the firm to legal liability under the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act.” The memo, dated three weeks ago, advises executives to “prepare for potential investigation by the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI).”
OFSI declined to comment on whether an investigation is underway. However, a source within the agency confirmed that “articles like this have a way of accelerating our inquiries.” The snack giant’s share price has fallen 4% since the packaging change was announced, but analysts say the real damage may be yet to come. “This is a classic case of cutting costs today to create a crisis tomorrow,” said a forensic accountant who reviewed the routing payments. “The company saved a few pence per pack by using Iranian ink. Now it may cost millions in fines.”
The full scale of the crisis remains unclear. The company has refused to confirm or deny the Iran connection. Its spokesman issued a statement: “We are fully compliant with all applicable laws and regulations. Any suggestion to the contrary is categorically false.” But the paper trail tells a different story. A purchase order, stamped “Approved” in April 2023, lists the Iranian supplier by name. The order total: £2.3 million for 500 drums of black ink concentrate.
Industry insiders say the scandal could spread. “If a crisp company can’t keep its supply chain clean, then what hope is there for the rest of us?” said a packaging industry analyst. “The ink supply chain is notoriously opaque. This may be just the tip of the iceberg.”








