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meat from cloned animal was eaten in uk, confirms fsa
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the uk’s food standards agency (fsa) has confirmed that meat from a cloned animal has entered the nation’s food chain and has been consumed. an agency investigation found that two cloned bulls born in the uk have been slaughtered and meat from one of them entered the food chain in july last year. meat from the second animal did not enter the food chain. the investigation came after reports that products from the offspring of cloned animals had hit the market in the uk, which would have been illegal as these products would be considered ‘novel foods’ and would therefore need authorization to be sold. novel food legislation covers food that has not been consumed to any significant degree in the eu before may 1997. a spokesperson from the representation of the european commission to the uk told foodnavigator.com that “no application was been made by any company in order to put foods from cloned animals on the market.” the issue made headlines in the uk last week, after an unnamed farmer told the international herald tribune that he was using milk from a cow bred from a clone as part of his daily production. fsa confirmed it was investigating the allegations, and yesterday issued findings from its initial examination. investigation as part of its research, the agency investigated farming organisations, the dairy industry, local authorities and breed associations. it traced two bulls born in the uk from embryos harvested from a cloned cow in the us, and subsequently slaughtered in the country. “the first, dundee paratrooper, was born in december 2006 and was slaughtered in july 2009. meat from this animal entered the food chain and will have been eaten. the second, dundee perfect, was born in march 2007 and was slaughtered on 27 july 2010. meat from this animal has been stopped from entering the food chain,” said the agency.
Source :foodnavigator.com
Date :
4
August
2010
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the uk food standards agency last week traced animals born in the uk from eight embryos produced by a cloned cow in the us. four of these embryos were male calves and four were female. all were holstein animals, a breed mainly used for dairy production.since the previous update published on 4 august, the agency has received assurances from the local authorities that visited the farms, the dairy industry and the farmers involved that no milk from the remaining two dairy cows has entered the food chain.
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the uk food standards agency is reminding people of its advice not to eat a type of seaweed called hijiki because it contains high levels of inorganic arsenic. inorganic arsenic is known to increase people’s risk of getting cancer.this reminder follows a notification from the european commission to the agency about a brand of hijiki seaweed, clearspring, which was found to contain high levels of arsenic.
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meat from the offspring of a cloned cow, raised and slaughtered in the uk has been exported to belgium, the uk’s food standards agency has confirmed. but belgian authorities say there is no food safety issue, so no rapid alert was required. the uk’s fsa said yesterday that meat from one of three offspring of cloned cows (two 2nd generation and one 3rd generation) has been exported to belgium.
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the food standards agency is reminding people of its advice not to eat a type of seaweed called hijiki because it contains high levels of inorganic arsenic. inorganic arsenic is known to increase people’s risk of getting cancer. this reminder follows a notification from the european commission to the agency about a brand of hijiki seaweed, clearspring, which was found to contain high levels of arsenic.
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the uk’s food standards agency said yesterday it would investigate reports that milk from the offspring of a cloned cow has gone on sale in the country. an anonymous uk farmer told the international herald tribune he was producing milk from a cow bred from a clone as part of his daily milk output. the farmer requested anonymity for fear of buyers no longer taking his milk, the newspaper said. the eu said two years ago that there was “no clear evidence” of any difference in safety between products from cloned or conventionally-bred animals.
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the uk’s food standards agency (fsa) has said it is investigating claims that milk from a cloned cow has entered the nation’s dairy supply. the announcement comes after an unnamed dairy farmer told the international herald tribune that he was using milk from a cow bred from a clone as part of his daily production. fsa said that this would need to be considered for ‘novel food’ approval before it can be sold in the market.
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the food standards agency has released the latest results of its quarterly tracker survey, which monitors public opinion and awareness of the food standards agency and key food issues. a representative sample of 2,111 adults in the uk was interviewed in the latest wave of the tracker (march 2010), by placing questions on the tns consumer omnibus survey.
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the uk advertising standards authority (asa) has ruled against press adverts promoting the bowel health potential of probiotic and fibre-containing food supplements due to a lack of scientific backing. the asa ruled that the claim that lepicol could, “make it easier to keep your bowels healthy\" was not backed by trials using the specific formulation of the product and therefore told the healthy bowels company the advert must not appear again.
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