March 23, 2010

 

EU votes for COOL law on meat products

 

 

The European Parliament Environment and Consumer Protection Committee have voted in favour of requiring country of origin (COOL) to be labelled on meat products.

 

The draft legislation aims to modernise, simplify and clarify food labelling within the EU. It would make minor changes to existing rules on information that is compulsory on all labels, such as name, list of ingredients, "best before" or "use by" date, specific conditions of use, and add a requirement to list key nutritional information.

 

The European Parliament agreed that key nutritional information, such as amounts of fat, saturated fat, carbohydrates, sugar and salt, must be mandatory for all products, however, they added proteins, fibre and natural and artificial trans-fats, which, under the original Commission proposal, would have been voluntary.

 

Parliament agreed that the regulation should give only general rules on how information should be displayed and not prescribe any specific system. This would enable Member States to adopt or retain national labelling rules.

 

Amendments to prevent them from promoting additional national schemes, provided these do not undermine the EU rules, were rejected.

 

The new rules were added to ensure that consumers are not misled by the presentation of food packaging. Members of European Parliament also insisted that foods should not be labelled in a way that could create the impression that they are a different food. Where an ingredient has been replaced, this should be clearly stated on the label.

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