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Food Safety

Nutrition and Health Claims

Nutrition and Health Claims

Union rules on nutrition and health claims have been established by Regulation (EC) No 1924/2006. The Regulation started to apply on 1 July 2007.

This regulation is the legal framework used by food business operators when they want to highlight the particular beneficial effects of their products, in relation to health and nutrition, on the product label or in its advertising.

The rules of the Regulation apply to nutrition claims (such as "low fat", "high fibre") and to health claims (such as "Vitamin D is needed for the normal growth and development of bone in children").

The objective of those rules is to ensure that any claim made on a food's labelling, presentation or advertising in the European Union is clear, accurate and based on scientific evidence.

Food bearing claims that could mislead consumers are prohibited on the EU market.

This not only protects consumers, but also promotes innovation and ensures fair competition. The rules ensure the free circulation of foods bearing claims, as any food company may use the same claims on its products anywhere in the European Union.

There are different procedures managed by the Commission for the various types of claims, with regard to their authorisation.

A public EU Register of Nutrition and Health Claims lists all permitted nutrition claims and all authorised and non-authorised health claims, as a source of reference and so that full transparency for consumers and food business operators is ensured.

Roadmap to review the Nutrition and Health Claims legislation

The Commission has published a Roadmap on the evaluation of the EU Nutrition and Health Claims legislation. This Roadmap is a first step in the evaluation process and outlines the purpose, content and scope of the evaluation. Stakeholders were able to submit their comments over a 4-week feedback period (starting from 8 October 2015).

Background

Prior to the proposal for the Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation (Proposal N° COM (2003) 424), the Commission published a Nutritional Claims and Functional Claims Discussion Paper.

It received comments from more than 90 stakeholders:

  1. Industry Groups
  2. Consumer Groups
  3. Other Groups

The European Parliament held its first reading vote on the Commission's proposal on 26 May 2005. On 3 June 2005, EU health ministers unanimously endorsed the Commission's proposal, including the provision for nutrient profiles and the authorisation procedure, during a first reading vote at the Health Council. The common position can be found here.

The European Parliament second reading vote took place on 16 May 2006, paving the way for final adoption of the new Health and Nutrition claims Regulation. Read the press release and MEMO issued following the Parliament vote.

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