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© 2007 Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada (Canadian Food Inspection Agency), all rights reserved. Use without permission is prohibited. Nutrition.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2007 Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada (Canadian Food Inspection Agency), all rights reserved. Use without permission is prohibited. Nutrition."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2007 Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada (Canadian Food Inspection Agency), all rights reserved. Use without permission is prohibited. Nutrition Labelling of Foods Dianne Del Zotto Fair Labelling Practices Program Specialist Consumer Protection Division, CFIA February 20, 2008

2 2 New Nutrition Labelling Regulations Published in Canada Gazette Part II, January 1, 2003 December 12, 2005: for most companies: − Companies with more than $1 million of gross revenues from the sale of food in Canada between 12 December 2001 and 12 December 2002 December 12, 2007: for smaller companies: − Companies with less than $1 million of gross revenues from the sale of food in Canada between 12 December 2001 and 12 December 2002

3 3 New Nutrition Labelling Regulations 3 Parts − Diet-related Health Claims: provision for use of 5 new claims − Nutrient Content Claims: updated requirements and restricted list − Nutrition Labelling: mandatory, standardized format and content

4 4 “Nutrition Facts” Table Core list of Calories and 13 nutrients always declared. Actual amount of the nutrient in the stated serving of the food is listed for macronutrients. The nutrient information based on a specified amount of food as sold. % Daily Value (%DV) indicates the relative amount of the nutrient in the stated serving.

5 5 Do the foods I sell require a Nutrition Facts Table (NFT)?

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9 9 What Foods Require a Nutrition Facts Table? Most prepackaged foods − Including retail packed foods − There are some exceptions and exemptions Not required on non-prepackaged foods May be voluntarily displayed on non-prepackaged foods or exempt prepackaged foods.

10 10 Nutrition Facts Table Exceptions NFT is prohibited on - infant formulas and foods containing them - formulated liquid diets - meal replacements - nutritional supplements - foods for use in very low energy diets

11 11 Always Exempt - one-bite candy, individual portions sold by restaurant, milks in glass bottles

12 12 Conditionally Exempt Term highlights that the exemption can be lost under certain circumstances and the Nutrition Fact Table required on the label

13 13 Conditionally Exempt Beverages with more than 0.5% alcohol Fresh vegetables or fruits or combinations Raw, Single-ingredient Meat, Poultry, Fish and by- products (except ground meat and poultry) road-side stand, craft show, flea market, fair, farmers’ market or sugar bush Individual servings for immediate consumption (without extended shelf life) packaged at retail + stickered, when ADS <200 cm2 Products prepared at the retail premises where sold (unless water is the only ingredient added to premix)

14 14 Conditionally Exempt - Fresh vegetables or fruits or combinations XX

15 15 Conditionally Exempt - RAW, Single-ingredient Meat, Poultry, Fish and by-products

16 16 Conditionally Exempt if sold only at road-side stand, craft show, flea market, fair, farmers’ market or sugar bush by the individual who prepared and processed the product

17 17 Conditionally Exempt if prepared and packaged at retail or packaged at retail + stickered + ADS < 200 cm 2 PREPARED & PACKAGED AT RETAIL PACKAGED AT RETAIL ADS < 200 cm 2

18 18 Loss of Exemption vitamin or mineral ingredients vitamin/mineral declared component (except flour) aspartame/sucralose/acesulfame-K ground meat/poultry Label or advertisement: − nutritional reference, nutrient content claim, biological role claim, health claim, health logo/symbol/name − “nutrition facts” or “valeur nutritive”

19 19 Foods for further manufacturing Multi-serving Ready To Serve Foods for Commerical Operations

20 20 Nutrition Labelling TOOL KIT A Introduction B What Products May Carry a NF Table C Contents of NF Table D Hierarchy of Formats E Available Display Surface F Presentation of NF Table G NF Table for Children <2 yrs H Foods- Use in Manufacturing/RTE Food Service I Glossary J NL Assessment Criteria K Tools & Templates

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22 22 Additional Information Servings per Container Calories from fat and/or Calories from sat+trans Additional Vitamins And Minerals Poly- and Mono- Unsaturated fats %DV for Cholesterol Potassium Soluble Fibre Sugar alcohols Starch Footnotes Information on any other component must appear outside of NF table

23 23 Basic Formats Standard Format Horizontal Format Linear Format

24 24 Guide to Developing Accurate Nutrient Values Health Canada website: − http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/label- etiquet/nutrition/reg/guide-nutri_val_tc-tm_e.html http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/label- etiquet/nutrition/reg/guide-nutri_val_tc-tm_e.html − Strong focus on issues faced by manufacturers in developing accurate nutrient labels − key steps involved, options and factors to consider when developing a program to generate nutrient values − will help you get started on choosing the appropriate approach

25 25 Guide to Developing Accurate Nutrient Values − factors that affect the nutrients in your products, such as natural variation in nutrients, manufacturing and processing influences and transportation and storage influences. − how to design a sampling plan, generate data from existing sources and how to use a commercial software program. − how the CFIA assesses the accuracy of nutrient values for nutrition labelling – the Nutrition Labelling Compliance Test − choosing a consultant, choosing a laboratory, reviewing results of laboratory analysis, critical features of databases and software.

26 26 Nutrient Content Claims New Regulations: Consolidation of 47 permitted claims in Food and Drug Regulations Specify the product compositional criteria and package labelling requirements Prohibit all other claims (expressed or implied) that characterize the level of a nutrient

27 27 Nutrient Claims - Compositional Criteria Based on: Regulated reference amounts  standardized quantities reflect the amount of a food consumed at a single eating occasion Servings of stated size  Serving guidelines Density criterion of 50 g for “low” claims  for reference amounts of 30 g / mL or less (E.g., reference amount for crackers is 20 g) (Chapter 7 of the 2003 Guide to Food Labelling and Advertising)

28 28 Old Nutrient Claims Low in Fat High in Fibre − 2 g / 25 g serving - 4 g / 130 g serving

29 29 New Nutrient Claims “low fat”, “contains only 2 g of fat per serving”, “little fat” − (and other expressions specified in regulation) Only permitted when there is # 3 g fat per; − serving and − reference amount (55 g for muffins) At 4.4 g fat per 55 g (and 1.7 g fibre) NO Low Fat claim & NO High Fibre claim

30 30 New Nutrient Claims Nutrient content made on label or in advertisement of a conditionally exempt prepackaged product = loss of exemption: A nutrition facts table must be declared! Nutrient content made on label or in advertisement of a non-prepackaged product: Amount of the nutrient must be declared per serving of stated size on the label or in the advertisement of food

31 31 Permitted Diet-related Health Claims Sodium and hypertension Calcium and osteoporosis Saturated and trans fat and heart disease Fruit and vegetables and some cancers Fermentable carbohydrate and tooth decay (Chapter 8 of the 2003 Guide to Food Labelling and Advertising)

32 32 References, Resources & Tools CFIA Website : − www.inspection.gc.ca www.inspection.gc.ca Health Canada Website: − http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/index_e.htmlhttp://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/index_e.html Justice of Canada Website: − http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/ http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/ Food and Drugs Act and Regulations: − http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/legislation/acts-lois/fdr-rad/index_e.html http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/legislation/acts-lois/fdr-rad/index_e.html 2003 Guide to Food Labelling and Advertising: − http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/guide/toce.shtml http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/guide/toce.shtml

33 33 References, Resources & Tools Nutrition Labelling Tool Kit: − http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/nutrikit/nutrikite.shtml http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/nutrikit/nutrikite.shtml Guide to Developing Accurate Nutrient Values: - http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/label-etiquet/nutrition/reg/guide- nutri_val_tc-tm_e.html http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/label-etiquet/nutrition/reg/guide- nutri_val_tc-tm_e.html Nutrition Labelling Compliance Test: − http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/nutricon/nutricone.sh tml http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/labeti/nutricon/nutricone.sh tml Your local CFIA office – for Ontario: labelwindow@inspection.gc.ca, 1-800-667-2657 labelwindow@inspection.gc.ca

34 34 http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/tools/listserv/listcsu be.shtml?LABETI-DEC

35 35 © 2007 Her Majesty the Queen in right of Canada (Canadian Food Inspection Agency), all rights reserved. Use without permission is prohibited.


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