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eustas president blames large firms for loss of stevia categories
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eustas (european stevia association) president professor jan guens says he is “very disappointed” by a decision taken by cargill and morita to remove a number of licensing application categories relating to use of steviol glycosides in food. last tuesday the european food safety authority (efsa) published revised exposure estimates for use of steviol glycosides as sweeteners in food and beverages, raising eyebrows in some quarters by revealing that industry players had withdrawn licensing applications for 15 food groups altogether, mainly in the ‘desserts and other products’ category. meanwhile, three new categories were introduced, including tabletop sweeteners (a major focus for leading stevia player cargill with its rebaudioside a-based product truvia, due for an imminent french launch) and smoked, dried, fermented and/or salted fish and fish products using soybean source or several specific varieties of seafood. in a letter released to foodnavigator.com, guens revealed the major parties with food additive petitions for steviol glycosides signed a mutual confidentiality agreement in january 2009 to write a ‘roadmap’, allowing efsa to combine data from several applications in reaching its positive opinion on steviol glycoside safety in april 2010. disagreement between petitioners but guens told foodnavigator.com this morning that a schism arose between eustas on one side, and the other two petitioners (cargill and morita) on the other, over necessary revisions to proposed usage levels; these addressed efsa's april 2010 concerns over edi (estimated daily intake) of steviol glycosides in soft drinks by children, given the authority’s adi (acceptable daily intake) figure of 4mg/kg by weight per day. guens said both companies initially removed the 15 categories last july, but he convinced the firms to reinstate them thereafter; however, he then received a phone call the day before the three dossier petitioners sent suggestions for revised levels to efsa, informing him that the categories were again being ditched. said guens: “this is bad news for the industry, and for smaller firms who focus on [adding steviol glycosides] to biscuits, bakery goods, chocolate-based products in particular. i am very disappointed that the big firms cargill and morita removed those 15 categories.” unduly high soft drink use levels? stressing that “the voice of eustas and independent scientists was never considered” in pleas to halve maximum use levels in soft drinks, guens said: “i always said soft drinks were a problem, the big firms wanted unduly high values for them.”
Source :foodnavigator.com
Date :
7
February
2011
Category :
Rest
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campylobacter has been detected on the external packaging of 40 per cent of fresh chickens on sale in shops across one major uk city, a study has found. the report from birmingham city council urged meat processors to use stronger packaging , called on supermarkets to employ better display techniques and suggested a public awareness campaign in a bid to cut the risk of cross-contamination of the foodbourne bacteria from external packing.
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the battle against foodborne viruses should focus on prevention of contamination during production rather than measures to eliminate them from tainted food, said the european food safety authority (efsa). norovirus the european food safety watchdog said foodborne viruses are the second most common cause of outbreaks in the region – bested only by the ubiquitous salmonella bug - and have been on the rise since 2007.
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food safety authorities in asia and australasia have banned a number of soft drinks from taiwan after it emerged that a clouding agent had been contaminating with the plastics additive dehp. sports drinks, juices and fruit jellies are among the products that have been pulled from shelves in taiwan and banned by trading partners in the wake of the contamination scare. what is dehp? used in food and drink packaging to make plastic less brittle, di (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (dehp) is not approved as a food additive by any national authority.
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campylobacteriosis and salmonella remained the most common zoonotic diseases in humans in the european union during 2008 - but incidences of both have fallen, said the region’s food safety watchdog. the number of cases of verotoxigenic escherichia coli (vtec) rose by almost nine per cent, said the european food safety authority (efsa) in its annual report on zoonotic diseases and food borne outbreaks.
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as the old year draws to a close, we review the significant waypoints of 2009 and look ahead to what is likely to dominate next year’s news. join us now for a whistle-stop tour of the news topics that made the headlines on our flagship food and nutrition websites in europe and north america. foodnavigator.com foodnavigatorusa.com caroline scott-thomas europe: 2009 was the year when stevia sweeteners came to europe.
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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.
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with the ushering in of new hygiene laws at the start of this year, food companies are now under tougher regulatory scrutiny to ensure they do not send out poisonous products from their plants. laws on food hygiene, a regulation on microbiological criteria for foodstuffs, a regulation on official feed and food controls, and another on feed hygiene make up a complementary package of rules to tighten and harmonise the eu's safety measures.
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