PHM-Exch> Food labeling system rejected by EU Parliament
Claudio Schuftan
cschuftan at phmovement.org
Fri Jun 18 11:05:35 PDT 2010
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From: Patti Rundall prundall at babymilkaction.org
:
Sorry for this disappointing news to all those who wrote to their MEPs -
the industry 1 billion euros allegedly spent on lobbying seems to have
worked. I understand that the issue is not over yet and that there will be
another Plenary vote and discussion at the EU Council.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/news/laid-bare-the-lobbying-campaign-that-won-the-food-labelling-battle-2003686.html
June 18, 2010
Laid bare, the lobbying campaign that won the food labelling battle
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
The lobbying carried out by food manufacturers to block a European-wide food
labelling system backed by doctors is laid bare in a series of private
emails published today by The Independent.
In a flurry of statements and position papers to MEPs in the run up to key
votes, Kellogg's, Danone, Coca-Cola, Nestle and other manufacturers claimed
that colour-coded traffic lights were incapable of informing shoppers about
the right diet.
They claimed that studies showed that their favoured percentage-based
Guideline Daily Amounts (GDAs) had wide consumer acceptance. Polls by the
National Heart Forum and the consumer group Which? that looked at both
systems found shoppers preferred colour-coding.
On Wednesday, the European Parliament rejected the traffic light system
devised by the Food Standards Agency vote in favour of GDAs. At the same
time, they backed the compulsory labelling of harmful trans-fats and country
of origin on processed products.
Glenis Willmott, the leader of Labour's MEPs, accused the food industry of
heavy-handed tactics. "People weren't being told the full facts and the
amount of time and money poured in by lobbyists was huge," she said. "It
must have had an impact."
Mette Kahlin, policy advocate for Which?, said: "While I was lobbying in
Brussels for Which? it was clear I was outnumbered by industry lobbyists
100-1. Consumer and health organisations don't have enough money to match
that."
Devised by the UK Food Standards Agency in 2006, traffic lights show red
lights for high levels of salt, fat and sugar, and amber and green for lower
amounts. The British Medical Association, British Dietetic Association and
British Heart Foundation are among the health groups that support the
scheme.
On Monday, the Ad Hoc GDA Group, representing 11 manufacturers including
Kellogg's, Mars, Nestle and Unilever, emailed MPs in a last-ditch attempt to
swing their vote. "We still believe that a traffic light approach provides
too judgmental an assessment of foodstuffs - the complex nutritional
composition of a food and its place in the diet cannot be reduced to a
single colour," they wrote.
In an earlier email, Nestle France warned that the introduction of a
colour-coded system would "in effect, create an arbitrary judgement about
the food and this, in total disconnection with dietary requirements."
Coca-Cola even claimed that a diet based upon green lights could be harmful.
In a document headed "Food labelling, basic elements for discussion", sent
in 2008, the US fizzy drinks giant told MEPs: "Colour coding gives the
consumer false assurances. A diet based upon products with green lights
would lead to chronic nutritional deficiences."
"The briefings are not based on evidence," protested Ms Kahlin, of Which?
"In the UK we have had traffic lights and no one has been admitted to
hospital with malnutrition from eating food signed with green lights. People
still eat products marked red but they become aware of what is in their
food."
The EU wants to introduce a unified labelling system to cut obesity,
diabetes and other illnesses, which are causing millions of lost days at
work and billions of pounds in health costs. Poor diet is thought to kill
70,000 people in the UK every year.
At the request of the Food Standards Agency, retailers Sainsbury's, Waitrose
and Asda have put traffic lights on their own-label products, but they have
been fiercely opposed by Tesco and multinational manufacturers.
In recent months, Pepsico, Danone and other global food giants and trade
groups have mounted one of the biggest lobbying operations in EU history.
Lobbyists accosted MEPs in bars and restaurants and began turning up in
their offices without appointments. They bombarded MEPs with documents,
reports and factsheets praising GDAs and undermining traffic lights.
The lobbying was aimed at members of the Environment committee before a key
vote in March, when it rejected traffic lights by 32-30. All 736 MEPs were
targeted in the run-up to Wednesday's vote.
Manufacturers maintained the lobbying was based on solid evidence.
Kellogg's said: "If we're to win the obesity battle, consumers need a
labelling scheme that gives them a much greater understanding of what's in
their food so they can make informed choices. GDAs do this in a way traffic
lights simply can't, and that's why we'll continue to use and support them."
Coca-Cola said: "Our communication to MEPs was based on thorough research of
European consumers that is publicly available."
Nestle said: "GDAs are factual and objective and ensure consumers can
evaluate a product's role in their daily diet."
Unilever, Mars and Danone were unavailable for comment.
What the food giants told MEPs
Coca-Cola
As MEPS began to discuss food labelling two years ago, Coke emailed MEPs
stating that GDAs were "an effective consumer education tool". It added:
"Colour-coding is over-simplifying. It classifies food into 'good' and 'bad
products' and does not take into account the amount consumed."
Danone
Danone voiced its support for GDAs, telling MEPs that research showed the
system - "which has been confirmed" by the Parliament's Environment
committee - fully informed consumers about the food composition of the
products they bought.
Kellogg's
One of a group of companies in the Ad Hoc GDA Group, Kellogg's signed an
email sent to MEPs, which stated that traffic lights were "too judgmental"
about products high in salt, fat or sugar. Kellogg's has been a firm backer
of "science-based" GDAs.
Nestle
Nestle said traffic lights would create "arbitrary judgements". The Swiss
giant said the colour-coding would classify foodstuffs as "good" and "bad",
whereas people should follow a "varied and balance diet which does not
formally exclude any single food".
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