Title: EUROPEAN FOOD LEGISLATION
1EUROPEAN FOOD LEGISLATION
- Neville Craddock
- EuropAid Project
- Astana
- March - April 2006
2EU Organic FoodsRegulation 2092/91
- Council Regulation No 2092/91
- on organic production of agricultural products
and indications referring thereto on agricultural
products and foodstuffs - Official Journal L 198 of 22.07.1991
3EU Organic Foods Regulation 1788/2001
- 3rd country imports must be produced, inspected
and marketed under conditions equivalent to those
applicable to EU products - Imported products may only be marketed in the EU
if - an original certificate of inspection (15
questions) is submitted to the importing Member
State's authority - consignment verified by the Member State
authority - endorsement of the certificate of inspection
- Further procedures specified when consignment
split
4EU Organic Foods Regulation 2092/91
- Regulation is 89 detailed pages and applies to
- non-processed agricultural products (vegetable
and animal) - produced in accordance with specified rules 15
pages - processed foods which incorporate such products
- reference to organic production in labelling
and advertising only if certain conditions
specified in annexes are met - plant protection products, detergents,
fertilisers or soil conditioners, Annex II - 10
pages - inspection procedures Annex III - 8 pages
5EU Organic Foods Regulation 2092/91
- Annexes to the Regulation specify the following
- principles of organic production on farms
- products permitted for fertilisation, soil
improvement or combating parasites and disease - minimum inspection requirements and precautionary
measures under the regular inspection scheme - information to be notified to authorities
- authorised (non-organic) agricultural ingredients
- non-agricultural ingredients
- substances authorised for use during preparation
- GMOs and derived products are not permitted to be
present
6EU Organic Foods Regulation 2092/91
- Operators who produce, prepare or import organic
products must - notify approved, specially-designated authorities
who undertake regular inspections Annex III 8
pages - the minimum precautionary and inspection measures
specified - initial then at least annual (random and
unannounced) - fully documented
- include stock and financial records
- input purchases and output yields
- supplier and customer / exporter details
- packaging, storage and distribution strict
rules - complex procedures e.g. UK guidelines are 100
pages
7Organic Trade Exports to USA
- Organic Foods Production Act 1990
- USDA National Organic Program (NOP)
- Effective from 21/10/2002
- ALL organic products sold in USA must be
certified to NOP standards not identical to EU
8USA NOP Standards - Producers
- 3 years conversion (In EC, annual crops require 2
years and perennials require 3 years) - Organic Livestock must be fed 100 organic feed.
- Irradiation, and genetically modified organisms
are not permitted. (Not permitted in EC either) - Livestock must have been under organic management
from the last third of gestation, except poultry
which must be from day 2 of hatching. (EU
Standards are species specific, in part they are
tighter, in part less strict) - There are some differences in permitted inputs
9USA NOP Standards - Processors
- 100 Organic means 100 of ALL ingredients
(except Water Salt) (In EC we express in
terms of agricultural content only) - To call a product ORGANIC it must have NOT LESS
than 95 organic (same as for EC except that we
base on agriculturals) - With 70-95 Organic can say Made with Organic
followed by up to three specific ingredients (In
EC we have a prescribed special emphasis clause) - With less than 70 organics (in US terms) only
the listed organic ingredients can be mentioned.
(In EC no reference to organic can be made) - There are a few differences in the permitted
non-organic inputs
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11FOOD FORTIFICATION(Addition of Nutrients)
- Proposed EU legislation due to be finalised May
2006
12EU FORTIFICATION current situation
- Addition of vitamins, minerals etc is not
harmonised in EU and has led to numerous trade
disputes (e.g. breakfast cereals, bread and
flour) - mandatory in some EU countries for some products,
e.g. - margarine, flour (to copy butter / replace lost
nutrients) - iodide in salt (to counter nutritional
deficiency) - voluntary in others
- banned in some
- e.g. UK requires mandatory fortification of bread
and flour (but must accept these from other MS /
EEA where production / sale of un-fortified
products is legal due to Mutual Recognition
Principle)
13Mutual Recognition Principle
- Member States can waive this principle only under
very strict conditions - If restrictions to free movement justified by
grounds of public policy or security, protection
of health and life of persons, animals, plants
(art 30) and (more recently) environment
protection - overrides requirements of general public
importance fair trade, consumer protection
14EU FORTIFICATION PROPOSALS
- Growing market for wide range of
voluntarily-fortified products - many considered by consumers (and authorities) as
misleading and unnecessary - So EU is moving to restrict fortification by
industry - Vitamins and minerals will NOT be permitted to be
added to - unprocessed foods fruits, vegetables, meat,
poultry and fish - alcoholic drinks gt1.2 alcohol, except specific
wine legislation - additional categories of foods may be defined
(nutrition profiles?) - Any direct or indirect health and nutrition
benefit claims will have to be formally-approved
under separate (new) EU Regulation
15EU FORTIFICATION PROPOSALS
- Harmonisation internal market consumer
protection - Addition of vitamins, minerals and other
substances - Without prejudice to existing legislation that
already specifies fortification - Prescribes vitamins, minerals and their permitted
chemical forms - Addition will be permitted to take into account
- deficiency in population / groups (clinical
evidence / low intakes) - improvement to nutritional status / correction of
dietary habit changes - evolving scientific knowledge on role and effects
on health
16EU FORTIFICATION PROPOSALS
- Conditions will be set
- must not exceed (not yet set) maximum levels,
taking into account - upper safe levels (risk assessment for different
population groups) - intakes from other sources
- reference intake levels and (if already close to
Upper Safe Levels) - contribution of individual products to diet
(including sub-groups) - nutrient profiles established for claims purposes
- must result in significant amount (Directive
90/496) - minimum amounts may be set for specific foods /
categories of foods - purity criteria must be met (but not yet defined)
- existing Community criteria
- generally-accepted international (or stricter MS
national criteria)
17EU FORTIFICATION PROPOSALS
- Labelling, presentation and advertising claims
will be restricted - must not state / imply balanced and varied diet
is inadequate - must not mislead / deceive as to nutritional
merit of fortified food - must declare the Big 8 nutrition labelling
- must declare total amounts present of added
vitamins and minerals - may claim addition under conditions specified in
Claims Regulation
18EU FORTIFICATION PROPOSALS
- Addition of Other Substances (e.g. plant
extracts) will also be restricted - if addition / use would result in consumption of
amounts greatly exceeding those reasonably
expected from normal consumption of balanced and
varied diet and / or would otherwise represent
potential risk - Commission Decision (EFSA Assessment), substance
may be - prohibited
- conditionally permitted
- put under Community scrutiny 4 years for EFSA
to evaluate - Additional restrictions for specified foods may
also apply
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20EU Veterinary Legislationfor Imported Products
21EU Food Legislation Structures
- General Food Law Regulation 178/2004 is framework
for FOOD safety - Depends on numerous secondary legislation for
practical effect and to define parameters used to
determine safety - For animal-based products
- Animal Products Hygiene Regulation 853/2004
(unprocessed products) - Official Controls on Products of Animal Origin
Regulation 854/2004 - General Food Hygiene Regulation 852/2004 (foods
using POAO) - Directives on Veterinary Drug Residues,
Contaminants, Additives in products, Labelling,
etc PLUS - Numerous, specific ANIMAL HEALTH RULES have
potential to override any FOOD Safety rules
22EU Veterinary Legislation - imports
- Specific ANIMAL HEALTH rules govern introduction
from third countries of products of animal origin
for human consumption (and for other uses under
BSE legislation) - to prevent introduction or spread of animal
diseases that may present an animal health hazard
for Community livestock. - common EU provisions concerning in particular
- restrictions applicable to products coming from a
holding or area infected by epizootic diseases
and - the obligation to subject products coming from
restricted areas to treatment to destroy the
disease agent
23EU Veterinary Legislation - imports
- Principal ANIMAL HEALTH Regulations and
Directives (in all cases supplemented by specific
and frequently changing Decisions) - Directive 2004/68 bovine and other ungulate
animal imports - Directive 2002/29 specific rules for 3rd
country imports - Directive 1997/78 veterinary checks on 3rd
country imports - Directive 1992/65 animals not covered by
Directive 1992/65 - Directive 1991/496 organisation of veterinary
checks at import - Directive 1990/426 horse (equidae) imports
- Regulation 999/2001 BSE (Mad cow disease)
24Animal product imports - general
- Administrative requirements in specific
legislation Commission Decisions - Prescribed format / wording for health
certificates to guarantee EU import conditions
are met - must accompany all imports
- must be signed by an official veterinarian
- Products must be imported through a designated
Border Inspection Post - Products and certificates checked and verified by
EU official veterinarians - Further checks on products also possible at the
final destination
25EU Veterinary Legislation Directive 1997/78
- Lays down principles governing organisation of
veterinary checks on EU imports from 3rd
countries - all consignments subject to same scrutiny
- administrative, documentation and identity checks
- designated border inspection posts for imports
to EU - consignments which fail or by-pass veterinary
checks will be seized and either destroyed or
re-dispatched - if doubts about validity of documents physical
checks - extends to PLANT products that may pose animal
health risks - Safeguard measures increased checks or
outright ban
26EU Veterinary Legislation Directive 2002/99
- ANIMAL HEALTH rules governing the import from 3rd
countries of products of animal origin and
products obtained from them - Products must be obtained from animals which
- are NOT from a holding or area subject to
specified animal health restrictions - were NOT slaughtered in an establishment in which
animals infected (or suspected) with a specified
disease, or carcasses or parts of such animals
were present during slaughtering or production
process - (in the case of aquaculture animals and products)
comply with Directive 91/67/EEC (notifiable fish
diseases)
27EU Veterinary Legislation Directive 2002/99
- Imported products must meet specified EU
procedures or offer equivalent animal health
guarantees - Must be on list of permitted 3rd countries
- FVO audit must have taken place
- must demonstrate that competent veterinary
authority is able to deliver, in practice, the
guarantees of compliance - in practice, FVO will audit and assess the areas
on the next slide - EU may adopt Safeguard measures if outbreaks
occur
28EU Veterinary Legislation Directive 2002/99
- Legislation of the 3rd country
- Organisation, powers, supervision, skills,
independence and qualifications of the veterinary
authority or other inspection services - Animal health requirements applied to whole
supply chain of animal products intended for EU - Strength and validity of assurances of
equivalence given - EU past experiences with 3rd country
- Previous FVO inspections and/or audits, results
and follow-up - Health status of livestock, other domestic
animals and wildlife - Regularity, speed, accuracy of disease
information (OIE rules) - Rules on disease prevention and control,
implementation, (including imports from
neighbours and other countries)
29Requirements of Official Controls
- Competent Authorities must meet operational
criteria that guarantee efficiency, effectiveness
and impartiality - Control staff
- adequate training to be able to perform duties
competently - free from conflicts of interest
- must respect professional confidences
- Specific tasks may be delegated to independent
body, but only under strict conditions - must be impartial have legal powers necessary to
perform tasks - systems to ensure co-ordination between relevant
bodies
30Requirements of Official Controls
- access to adequate laboratory capacity
- appropriate, properly-maintained facilities and
equipment - sufficient, suitably qualified and experienced
staff - sampling and analysis methods
- validated - internationally-accepted protocols
(e.g. CEN / ISO / IUPAC) including those based on
performance criteria - carried out by accredited laboratories
- if non-compliance appropriate measures to be
taken measures and sanctions must be effective,
dissuasive and proportionate - contingency plans measures to be taken, reviewed
as appropriate
31FVO - Typical Report Structures
- Refer to the two FVO Mission Reports available
under references 1500/1998 and 1004/2000 by
searching Kazakhstan on - http//europa.eu.int/comm/food/fvo/ir_search_en.c
fm -
- Report on mission in field of animal and public
health and fishery products (November December
1998) - Report on mission to assess compliance with
Directive 91/493 on fishery products (April 2000)
32EU Veterinary Legislation Directive 2002/99
- Specified diseases (individual Directives apply)
- Classical swine fever (Directive 2001/89)
- African swine fever (Directive 2002/60)
- Foot-and-mouth disease (Directive 85/511)
- Avian influenza (Directive 92/40)
- Newcastle disease (Directive 92/66)
- Rinderpest (Directive 92/119)
- Sheep and goat plague (Directive 92/119)
- Swine vesicular disease (Directive 92/119)
- Aquaculture diseases
- Directive 91/67 (aquaculture animals and
products) - Directive 93/53 (certain fish diseases)
- Directive 95/70 (certain bivalve molluscs
diseases)
33OIE Infectious Diseases
- Information on all up-to-date aspects of
infectious animal diseases can be found on the
OIE website - http//www.oie.int/eng/maladies/en_classification.
htm
34EU Veterinary Legislation - imports
- Principal PUBLIC HEALTH Regulations and
Directives (in all cases supplemented by specific
and frequently changing Decisions) - Regulation 853/2004 - Animal Products Hygiene
(unprocessed products) - Regulation 854/2004 - Official Controls on
Products of Animal Origin - Regulation 852/2004 - General Food Hygiene (foods
using POAO) - Regulation 2160/2003 Salmonella and Zoonosis
control - Directive 1996/23 Monitoring of Residues of
Banned Substances - Regulation 2377/1990 Maximum Residue Levels
(veterinary drugs) - Directive 1986/363 - Maximum Residue Levels
(pesticides)
35EU Animal Product Hygiene Regulation 853/2004
- Imported food must comply with Regulation
178/2002 or equivalent - Regulation 853/2004 defines PUBLIC HEALTH hygiene
requirements for food of animal origin (replaces
previous sector rules) - manufacturers and competent authorities
responsibilities - establishment structural, operational and hygiene
requirements - procedures for the approval of establishments
- requirements for storage and transport
- health marks
- moves towards recognition / requirement for
HACCP-based controls - applies to small businesses with very limited
derogations
36EU Animal Product Hygiene Regulation 853/2004
- Imported products may only come from
- 3rd countries on a permitted list
- establishments on a permitted list
- approved slaughterhouses and cutting plants
(fresh meat etc) - live bivalve molluscs, etc must come from listed
production areas - production facilities meeting requirements of
Regulation 852/2004 - Detailed annexes set out specific requirements
approx 50 pages - special microbiological rules for Sweden and
Finland
37EU Directive 1996/23 - Residue Monitoring
- 3rd country must have an agreed ACTIVE and
EFFECTIVE residue monitoring plan which comprises - legislation status (authorisation / prohibition)
of list of defined substances - the infrastructure (including type and size) of
implementing departments - list of approved laboratories, plus their testing
capacity details - national tolerances for authorized substances (if
no EU MRLs) - list of substances to be detected, methods of
analysis, standards for interpretation of
results, number of samples and justifications - sample numbers and frequencies relative to
animals slaughtered - rules governing collection of official samples
(random, unannounced) - penalties and sanctions for contraventions
38EU Directive 1996/23 - Residue Monitoring
- List of substances and Schedule for monitoring by
classification, animal type, feed, including
water, and primary animal products - Specified anabolic and unauthorized substances
- Stilbenes Anti-thyroid agents Steroids
Zeranol Beta-agonists etc - Veterinary drugs
- Lengthy list of classes and examples
- Anti-bacterials (sulphonamides, quinolones etc)
Anthelmintics Anti-coccidials, including
nitro-imidazoles Carbamates and pyrethroids - Sedatives Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- Other pharmacologically active substances
- Contaminants
- Environmental contaminants Organo-phosphorus and
Organo-chlorines, including PCBs Mycotoxins
Chemical elements Dyes etc
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40Cereals Standards
- Safety Plant Health
- Safety Pesticides and Mycotoxins
- Quality CAP / Financial
- Commercial Aspects
41Directive 2000/29 Plant Health
- Protective measures against introduction into,
and spread within the EU, of organisms harmful to
plants / plant products (140 pages) - The general principles are based upon provisions
laid down in the International Plant Protection
Convention FAO and the WTO Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures - The technical lists are detailed and complex and
require specialist knowledge of plant diseases,
insect pests etc
42Directive 2000/29 Plant Health
- In general, listed plants, plant products and
other objects (in Part B of Annex V) must be
accompanied by a phytosanitary certificate,
issued by the National Plant Protection
Organisation of exporting country, (IPPC models),
certifying that products - have been subject to the appropriate inspections
- are considered to be free from quarantine harmful
organisms, and practically free from other
harmful organisms - are considered to conform with phytosanitary
regulations of EU - Scope also includes associated soil and insect
pests
43Directive 2000/29 Plant Health
- Specific reference to soil and growing medium,
attached to or associated with plants,
originating in - Turkey
- Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Russia, Ukraine
- non-European countries, other than Algeria,
Egypt, Israel, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia - (No reference to Kazakhstan)
- Special arrangements may be applied to cereals
and their derivatives - (but details are not apparent)
44Pesticide MRLs Regulation 396/2005
- Sets the rules and procedures for fixing maximum
residue levels of pesticides in or on food and
feed - applies to products to be used as fresh,
processed and/or composite food or feed - not apply to the products intended for
- the manufacture of products other than food or
feed - sowing or planting
- Crop and active chemicals combinations are
defined in Directive 91/414 (currently undergoing
total revision) - 0ver 700 pages of tables!!
45Pesticide MRLs Regulation 396/2005
- Permits import tolerance MRLs to meet needs of
international trade, where - the use of the active substance on a given
product is not authorised in EU for reasons other
than public health or - a different level is appropriate because the
existing EU MRL can be shown to be inappropriate
46Pesticide MRLs Directive 1991/414
- Regulates the authorization, marketing, use and
control of active substances and formulated plant
protection products (195 pages) - Active chemicals must be approved for specified
classes of use - Currently under total revision
- significant number will be deleted
- Maximum residue levels (MRLs) and residue
definition - Pre-harvest intervals for envisaged uses, or
withholding periods or storage periods, in the
case of post-harvest uses - Labelling and marketing requirements for sales
47Maximum Residue Levels
- Consolidated tables for all active chemicals and
the crops on which they can be used have been
produced, by crop and by chemical, respectively
and can be found on - http//europa.eu.int/comm/food/plant/protection/re
sources/mrl_crop.pdf - http//europa.eu.int/comm/food/plant/protection/re
sources/mrl_pesticide.pdf - via
- http//europa.eu.int/comm/food/plant/protection/pe
sticides/index_en.htm - (Both these tables comprise over 750 pages and
specific details can be provided by the project
if requested)
48Maximum Residue Levels for Wheat
49Cereals Standards Common Agricultural Policy
50Cereals Standards Common Agricultural Policy
51Cereals Deoxynivalenol (DON)
52Cereals - Zearalenone
53Cereals Aflatoxins B and G
54CERTIFICATION PROCEDURE - Coceral
- COCERAL is the EU grain traders association and
has its own commercial Code of Practice, Audit
and Accreditation scheme - Auditing and certification must be carried out by
an independent institution, accredited in EU
under EN 45012 or EN 45011. - Audit Inspectors must have received relevant
training, knowledge of relevant systems (Quality
Management Systems, HACCP and organisational
structures), sufficient knowledge in conducting
similar inspections and proven experience in the
food and feed sector. - COCERAL has a country list of acceptable
companies - Auditing against a formal check list, which
constitutes instructions on how to audit
operators under the European GTP-code.
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56EU MICROBIOLOGICAL CRITERIARegulation
2073/2005Quick Overview
57EU Microbiological Criteria
- Lays down the microbiological criteria to be
- met by food business operators, at all stages of
chain, when implementing HACCP under Regulation
852/2004 - food safety criteria applicable throughout
product shelf-life to be met under foreseeable
conditions of distribution, storage and use. - used by competent authority to verify compliance
in accordance with Regulation 882/2004 - Operators must test as appropriate, to validate
HACCP and GHP - Sets out product categories, sampling plans,
methodology and interpretive guidelines
58EU Microbiological Criteria Annex I
- Food safety criteria
- Process hygiene criteria
- meat and meat products milk and dairy products
egg products fishery products - vegetables, fruits and their products
- Rules for sampling and preparation of test
samples - general rules for sampling and preparation
- bacteriological sampling in slaughterhouses and
at premises producing minced meat and meat
preparations - may use alternative analytical methods
- if validated against Annex I or
- certified by 3rd party (EN/ISOÂ 16140 or similar
protocol)
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