Foodlaw-Reading

Dr David Jukes, The University of Reading, UK

..... ..... ..... ..... ..... .....

Food Law News - EU - 2023

Commission Daily News, 3 March 2023

CONTAMINANTS - Europe's Beating Cancer Plan: Arsenic levels lowered in food products to increase food safety and fight cancer

Today, the Commission adopted new rules to lower the presence of arsenic in food products. The adoption of lower maximum levels (MLs) marks another important step in delivering on the objectives of Europe's Beating Cancer Plan to limit or remove the carcinogenic risk associated to chemicals in food. This decision, based on a 2021 scientific report from EFSA, comes after Member States were called upon to monitor the presence of arsenic in foods.

Stella Kyriakides, Commissioner for Health and Food Safety, said: “We are today taking additional measures to further reduce the exposure risk of a carcinogenic contaminant from our food chain. Our citizens want the reassurance that the food they eat is safe, and these new rules are yet another proof that food safety standards in the EU remain the highest in the world.”

This measure will lower the allowed concentration of inorganic arsenic in white rice, while it also sets new limits for arsenic in many everyday rice-based food items, infant formula, baby foods, fruit juices and salt. The existing maximum levels for arsenic in food products were established in 2015 based on an EFSA opinion that stated that inorganic arsenic may cause cancer of the skin, bladder, and lungs. Arsenic is present at low concentrations in rocks, soil, and natural ground water, with food and drinking water being the principal routes of human exposure to it. Industrial emissions such as mining and burning of fossil fuels can contribute to higher levels of arsenic in the environment, as well as the use of fertilisers, wood preservatives, insecticides or herbicides that contain the contaminant.

Update: The Regulation has been published in the Official Journal. See:


To go to main Foodlaw-Reading Index page, click here.