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16th International EFLA Congress
in Cooperation with the Food Industries Association of Austria (FIAA)
How to Make Food Law in an Enlarged Europe: New Trends and
Challenges
21 – 22 September 2006
Penta Renaissance Hotel Vienna
Charles Cockbill, Acting President
The body of EU Food Law has expanded considerably in recent years.
Each new technical development with food production and processing
seems to have provoked a reaction with the Commission and those
that lobby it and a new, often detailed, law has been the outcome.
We now have a very complex structure of food law; so complex, I
suggest, that many involved in the production and processing of
food are unaware of all the details. This could particularly be
true for the small and medium sized enterprises, which the EU wishes
to encourage, where the resources to study all the ramifications
of developing food law are not available as they are with the large
multinational companies. If this is the case, this complexity may
be defeating the declared objectives of consumer protection and
safety.
The Commission White Paper of 1985 prepared when Lord Cockfield,
the industry commissioner, was responsible for food law matters,
envisaged the harmonisation of essential EU food law to permit the
free movement of foodstuffs between the member states in accordance
with the objectives of the Treaty of Rome. That White Paper recognised
the complexity of foodstuffs and avoided excessive detail especially
where decisions and conclusions could not be based on objective
criteria. It wrote about the great culinary diversity of the EU
which it aimed to maintain. There were then only 10 member states.
How much more diverse is it now with 25 member states and others
waiting. Diversity and standardisation are not easy bedfellows.
The publicity surrounding the food scares of the 1990s and the
consequent move of food law responsibility to DG SANCO was a significant
sea change. The primacy of the free movement of goods in EU food
law making was replaced by the objectives of food safety and consumer
protection. Not that these other objectives were absent before;
rules on food additives, food contaminants and food labelling were
as much about safety and consumer protection as they were about
fair trade. The move has however had a significant effect on the
nature of food law. EU food law has moved from a framework within
which all member states could operate to more detailed provisions
which in that detail often cause problems for one member state or
more. Since ultimately the decisions on EU food law are political,
these problems have resulted in national derogations. Derogations
are not harmonisation and can in themselves be barriers to trade.
There have been initiatives from time to time for deregulation
and simplification but these have largely come to nothing. Admittedly
the simplification and consolidation of the hygiene directives has
been successful, but this stands alone. In other areas there has
been no bold initiative to remove moribund or outdated laws. Rather
the emphasis has been in the other direction. Let us take the labelling
rules as an example. This is one of the earliest directives, predating
the 1985 White Paper, and was based on the Codex Alimentarius standard.
The aim as executed in the early directive was to ensure that consumers
were fully informed as to the nature, contents, handling and shelf
life of pre-packaged foodstuffs. Over the years these basic needs
have been added to with messages about nutrition, health, claims,
packaging, production methods and other matters leading to such
complex labels as to leave many consumers either bored or confused
by a plethora of semi-scientific information. Many of these issues
are more suited to education or information programmes, but there
is a suspicion that extra information on the label is an easy option
which relieves the authorities of the responsibility of educating
the public and transfers it to the food manufacturer or retailer.
I have used the labelling directive as an example of how rules
have become over-complex because it is an obvious one where decisions
can easily be subjective rather than objective. What is needed in
their promised review of food law is for the EU organisations to
be bold and be serious about reducing the burden of over-detailed
law. The review needs to identify under each of the objectives of
health and safety, information and free movement of goods what are
the essential matters that EU food law needs to address; to concentrate
on these; and be bold enough to discard the rest. Legal requirements
on food should be about what the consumer needs and not about what
consumers would like to have; the latter is a matter of marketing
for traders and not for legislators.
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