IP/09/221
Brussels, 05 February 2009
European Commission welcomes European
Parliament's vote on Animal Feed Regulation
Today the European Parliament adopted in first
reading a Regulation to replace the current legislation on marketing and use of
feed, both for farm animals and pets, based on a Commission proposal dating back
less than one year. The new legislation considerably simplifies the existing
procedures and improves the information farmers and pet owners will get on the
feed they buy for their animals. It will help to promote innovation and
competitiveness in the European feed sector and lead to a more integrated single
market for feed by reducing the administrative burden for feed
operators.
Androulla Vassiliou, EU Health Commissioner said: "I am very satisfied
that the European Parliament and the Council have reached agreement so quickly
on this key proposal. This new legislation represents a major step forward for
the simplification and modernisation of existing procedures for labelling and
marketing animal feed and pet food. The new Regulation will make the overall
system more efficient while maintaining the high level of protection of animal
health, animal welfare, food and feed safety we have achieved in the EU. At the
same time it will bring clarity to the EU livestock sector and help to boost its
competitiveness."
The new regulation caters for modern marketing conditions and addresses the
different information needs of the specific types of feed purchasers, such as
qualified farmers and ordinary pet owners, and up to date streams of
commercialisation such as the internet. Furthermore, it establishes a new
co-regulation approach which delegates competences in non-safety relevant areas
to feed operators, subject to approval by the Commission. By considerably
simplifying existing legislation, it reduces administrative burden for all
stakeholders.
The text contains provisions on the following main issues:
- Responsibility of the feed business operators.
- Negative list with prohibited substances for feed use.
- Mandatory labelling particulars for feed materials and mixed feed. Specific
mandatory labelling requirements are laid down for feed materials, compound feed
(including pet food) and "dietetic" feed. Any claim attached to a feed must be
properly substantiated.
- Creation of a guide to good labelling for farm animal feed and one for pet
food in co-regulation. The development of EU codes of good labelling practice in
the context of voluntary labelling provisions, for example on how much chicken a
pet food contains if it is labelled "with chicken", or on how feed additives are
labelled.
- Establishment of a Community Catalogue of feed materials in co-regulation.
The regulation transfers the initiative for updating the EU's list of feed
materials, specifying the most relevant compounds used in feed, from the
legislator to feed operators. Market transparency will be improved, because the
list of feed materials will better reflect current formulations and more quickly
incorporate innovations such as co-products from bio-fuel
production.
The Commission welcomes the work done by the European
Parliament and the Council as all the key objectives of the initial proposal
have been maintained in the text resulting from the co-decision process.
The new legislation has to be formally adopted by the Council, and it will
enter into force later this year.
For more information, please visit:
http://ec.europa.eu/food/food/animalnutrition/labelling/index_en.htm
MEMO/08/138