New Zealand authorities say a national farming body and dairy giant Fonterra have been sent letters threatening to poison milk formula.

Federated Farmers and Fonterra received the anonymous letters in November, said officials, along with sachets of contaminated product.

The letters appeared to be a protest over the use of the pesticide 1080 in agriculture.

PM John Key said milk formula was still safe to be consumed.

Officials said the person or group who sent the letters had threatened to carry out and publicise their threat unless New Zealand stopped using 1080 by the end of March.

At a news briefing at parliament on Tuesday, Mr Key said the news was being announced now because of increasing media enquiries.

He said there was "a low likelihood of the threat being carried out, but because of the nature of it, both the police and ministers have taken the treat seriously".

"I want to reassure parents that every step possible has been taken to respond to the threat, to ensure the ongoing safety of our food products."

He called the threat "a form of ecoterrorism, without doubt", reported the New Zealand Herald.

Police Deputy Commissioner of National Operations Mike Clement said the threat was possibly a hoax but that police were treating it as blackmail. He said a team had been investigating it since November.

"The letter writer may not have really considered the implications of their actions when this communication was drafted," he said.

Officials said that security measures by players in the supply chain had been significantly tightened since the threats began, and that no traces of 1080 had been found in milk formula. About 40,000 tests have been conducted on products.

"The ability for anybody to deliberately contaminate infant and other formula during manufacturing is extremely low," said Scott Gallagher, the deputy director general for the ministry for primary industries.

Fonterra chief Theo Spierings called the threat "despicable".

In a statement the company said the entire dairy industry had been targeted, but that it could assure its customers that "all of our milk and products are safe and of high quality, and our supply chain continues to be secure and world-class".

Source: BBC