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“Workshop on the revision of the Novel Food Regulation (NFR)• Views and experiences regarding traditional foods •”

1 December 2005 at Eurovillage Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

Organized by CBI and UNCTAD BioTrade.
Partners: GTZ, GFU and IPGRI
 

Description

The BTFP work with exporters of natural ingredients has experienced that NFR, as currently applied, is in direct conflict with the aim of promoting sustainable trade of biodiversity-based food products and is preventing small-scale farmers and communities in developing countries from using their rich botanical heritage to improve their economic situation.

A wide range of traditional foods potentially available from developing countries is being denied access to the EU by over-strict interpretation of the NFR, which fails to differentiate fails between genuinely new foods that have not been consumed anywhere before, and foods that are merely new to Europe and are only “novel” due to an arbitrary cut-off date in legislation that was not intended directly for them. They must therefore undergo a stringent, formal EU safety assessment and pre-market authorisation, for which scientific and administrative demands are considerable, potentially lengthy and expensive, and place a heavy and disproportionate burden on potential exporters.

The Commission recognised this, and proposed possible solutions in its own Discussion Paper in 2002. Ongoing efforts of the UNCTAD/BTFP build on the merits of the Commission’s suggestions and explore further options for change from the perspective of developing countries, based on the premise that traditional foods with a long history of human consumption should be considered separately from truly “innovative” products such as novel additives and food chemicals.

The objective of the workshop is to present technical suggestions for the revision of the directive (as proposed in UNCTAD-CBI's discussion paper) and to hear perspectives from developing countries and European Health and Consumer Protection Institutions. Exporters from developing countries, as well as European importers will also be present.

The BTFP’s contributions are helping developing countries to export their natural biodiversity, as well as facilitating resource sustainability and the achievement of development objectives in the exporting countries.

 

Minutes of this workshop are available

 

Download                Programme
                              Participants List

 

Download                Background Documents and Presentations

Discussion paper: Impact on the Potential Exports of Exotic Traditional Foods to the EU: Suggestions for Revision
Paper commissioned by UNCTAD/CBI to Neville Craddock Associates

Missing the Market: Issue paper
Issue paper produced by UNCTAD, the CBI, GTZ, GFU and IPGRI

Presentation: EU Novel Food Regulation Review Outline of Proposed Revisions CBI - UNCTAD (ppt presentation)
Neville Craddock , CBI - UNCTAD Consultant

Biodiversity and traditional foods in developing countries
Michael Hermann,  International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI)

The Case of Araza, an exotic fruit from the Amazon in Ecuador
Marcelo Romero , Romero Kotre Inc

The Case of Gooseberry Amla from India
Benny Antony, PhD Technical Director, Arjuna Natural Extracts Ltd.

The Case of Lucuma from Peru
Lidwine Dellaert, Prolucuma 

Novelfoods and exports from Africa
Cyril Lombard, PhytoTrade Africa

Perspective on the impact of the EU Novel Food Regulation;  Peru: a developing country
Pedro Bravo, Counselor of the Permanent Mission of Peru to the European Union

Views and experiences regarding traditional foods
Mark Hein, Entrepreneur on behalf of the IPPN – Peruvian Institute of Natural Products

Opinion Regarding the Novel Food Regulation for general reconciliation
Paul J. Greineder, Managing Director Pharmos Natur GMBH (German company) 

 

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