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  uk labelling proposal under the spotlight  

owen warnock, partner and food law expert at international law firm eversheds, checks the fine print on calls for legislation in the uk regarding country of origin meat labelling. high profile uk politicians are showing a lot of interest in the country of origin of meat ingredients in food products. both the environment secretary, hilary benn, and his shadow, nick herbert, have called for much greater clarity in relation to british made products which contain foreign meat. and much of the campaigning on origin labelling has been on the basis that it is legal to describe sausages made from imported pork as ‘british pork sausages’ as long as the manufacturing took place in the uk. the leading opposition party, the conservatives, has published a parliamentary bill that requires detailed labelling of the country of birth, rearing and slaughtering of meat contained in foods. however, such rules might well be held illegal under eu single market rules. what is the legal position? under existing uk food labelling regulations, which implement the eu food labelling directive, labels must state the place of origin of the food if failure to give that information may mislead the purchaser to a material degree as to the true origin of the food. the accepted view is that the place of origin of food is the place where it last underwent a substantial change. that means that it would not be misleading to use words on a label that suggest a british origin for a product made in the uk even if some ingredients come from other countries. there is in fact no definition in food law about what is meant by ‘place of origin’ of a food, and the interpretation above comes from the trade descriptions act 1968. however, there is also a general legal obligation not to use labels which are misleading fsa guidelines and the guidance issued by the uk’s food standards agency takes the position that if consumers might understand ‘british pork sausages’ to mean that the primary ingredient, pork, is british then the labelling should be amended to make it clear that the pork is from another country. but it is far from clear when a court will decide that consumers might misunderstand a label in this way. the fsa guidance deals with this by making some further ‘best practice’ recommendations which err on the side of giving additional information to the consumer. for example the agency say that to describe a rabbit pie which was made in the uk from imported rabbit as ‘produced in the uk’ would not be best practice and suggest instead ‘made in britain from imported rabbit’. the politicians weigh in the conservatives proposal would amend the food labelling regulations to make it compulsory to set out on the label ‘particulars of the place of origin of the meat components of any meat product’. this would apply, even if no claim of britishness were made, to any meat which amounted to at least 10 per cent of the total weight of the product. in addition the country of origin would be defined to mean the country where the animal was born. if the animal was reared or slaughtered in a different country or countries then those would also need to be stated. finally, under the proposed bill, a product could not be labelled british unless the meat came from an animal which was born, reared and slaughtered in the uk - and it appears that that rule would apply even if the meat content was less than 10 per cent. limited in scope the best argument to defend the conservative bill is that the eu itself is proposing very similar legislation, which suggests that there is a genuine problem that needs to be addressed. however a problem with this is that the bill is directed only at meat - if the intention is to prevent consumers being misled, rather than to protect the british meat industry, why is it not just as important to introduce similar rules in relation to the country of origin of plant ingredients? what would the conservative’s bill mean for manufacturers? the bill would have a serious impact on labelling costs and practicalities - every time the geographical source of meat ingredients changed the in a product the label would need to change. in practice manufacturers would have to stick with a single country of supply, which would of course make it harder to keep ingredient costs to a minimum. a second difficulty stems from the proposed ban on calling a product british if there is even the smallest amount of meat in it which was not bred, reared and slaughtered in the uk. either a manufacturer cease to make such a claim or it gives british farmers a monopoly. what will happen? the eu is currently debating an update to the food labelling directive, the food information regulation, which would tighten the rules so that where the place origin of the food is not the same as that of one of its primary ingredients then the place of origin of the ingredient would have to be stated. however, the conservative bill goes beyond those eu proposals and applies even if there is no risk of the consumer being misled. there is a major eu law problem with the uk legislating on this issue as such legislation would amount to a restriction on free trade. eu states are forbidden from introducing such measures unless they are justified by considerations such as public policy or public health. in relation to the origin of meat, clearly there is no public health argument, so the uk would have to rely on the ‘public policy’ caveat, on the basis that it is necessary to introduce these rules to avoid consumers being misled. however, the european commission might well reject this justification given that the existing labelling directive and the proposed food information regulation both deal expressly with the issue, thus leaving no room for a member state to introduce tighter rules.


    Source :foodanddrinkeurope.com     Date : 2  March   2009    Category : Meat Products


fsa investigates claims of ‘cloned’ milk in uk

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. more

 Source : foodnavigator.com   Date : 2 August 2010   Category : Standards and Certificates
fsa could do better over new technologies

this month marks the 10th anniversary of the uk’s food standards agency. sue davies, chief policy advisor at consumer group which?, which fought for the fsa’s creation in the wake of the bse crisis, shares her views on its job over the last 10 years. over the last decade, the fsa has delivered a more open, transparent and inclusive approach to food policy decision-making; has been more pro-active in helping people understand and act on healthy eating advice and, while some problems still exist, it has ended the food scares that pre-empted its set up. more

 Source : foodqualitynews.com   Date : 31 March 2010   Category : Standards and Certificates
uk food safety agency in fraud crackdown

a new food fraud division will support local authorities to take swift action to stop illegal activity as well as helping them uncover cases where the consumer has been misled, announced the uk’s food standards agency (fsa). speaking to foodproductiondaily.com, an fsa spokesperson said that its new food fraud advisory unit builds on and takes over the work of the illegal meat task force (imtf), which supported illegal meat investigations over five years. more

 Source : Food Safety, HACCP, Food Quality, Food Microbiology, Hygiene   Date : 15 April 2009   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
uk food safety agency in fraud crackdown

a new food fraud division will support local authorities to take swift action to stop illegal activity as well as helping them uncover cases where the consumer has been misled, announced the uk’s food standards agency (fsa). speaking to foodproductiondaily.com, an fsa spokesperson said that its new food fraud advisory unit builds on and takes over the work of the illegal meat task force (imtf), which supported illegal meat investigations over five years. more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 15 April 2009   Category : Dairy Products
uk’s food watchdog probes cloned cow milk claims

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. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 3 August 2010   Category : Standards and Certificates
nut so good - tainted us food system needs revamping

e. coli in ground beef, melamine in infant formula, and salmonella in peanut butter - what is next? isn’t it about time the slices of the us food safety pie were taken back from the multiple federal agencies involved and surveillance placed under one roof? confidence in a system where 15 different agencies administer as many as 30 laws is ebbing with us politicians and food companies, following the recent salmonella scare linked to eight deaths, demanding an overhaul of how the sector is regulated. more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 2 February 2009   Category : Standard Sand Certificates
commission to be quizzed on cloning safety, ethics

the debate over products from cloned animals entering the european food chain will enter a new phase next week, as meps ask the commission searching questions about the welfare of cloned animals, ethics, and consumer information. the european commission has previously said that meat and milk from cloned animals are “expected to spread within the global food as early as 2010”, according to a parliament communiqué . more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 29 August 2008   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
arsenic rice study prompts new advice for parents

the uk’s food standards agency is advising that infants are not given rice drinks as a replacement for cows’ milk, breast milk, or infant formula, following a new study that indicates potential to exceed maximum intake. last year a study published in the journal environmental pollution analysed samples from three brands of pure baby rice formulae from different manufacturers, and found inorganic arsenic levels to range from 0. more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 11 November 2007   Category : Dried Foods
far east plastics still a problem for formaldehyde: fsa

the migration of formaldehyde into foods from food contact materials manufactured in the far east may still be a problem, according to a new fsa survey. the uk’s food standards agency (fsa) tested 50 samples of food contact material from the far east, and found that eight exceeded ec norms. “the results of this survey suggest that there may still continue to be a problem with some imports into the eu of melamine-ware from the far east,” stated the agency. more

 Source : Food Safety, HACCP, Food Quality, Food Microbiology, Hygiene   Date : 29 August 2008   Category : Standards and Certificates
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