Codex adopts food additives
This article was originally published in The Tan Sheet
Executive Summary
The International Alliance of Dietary/Food Supplement Associations is celebrating Codex Alimentarius' adoption of nine widely-used additives at levels proposed by the trade group, IADSA says in a July 6 release. Castor Oil (1,000 mg/kg), Polysorbates (25,000 mg/kg), Polyvinyl Alcohol (45,000 mg/kg), Acesulfame Potassium (2,000 mg/kg), Aspartame (5,500 mg/kg), Cyclamates (1,250 mg/kg), Neotame (90 mg/kg), Saccharin (1,200 mg/kg) and Sucralose (2,400 mg/kg) are now included in the official Codex General Standard for Food Additives following a campaign by IADSA members (1"The Tan Sheet" June 5, 2006, p. 6). IADSA Manager of Regulatory Affairs David Pineda says, "This is an excellent result. The adoption of these additives will help to ensure free trade in dietary supplements across the world and encourage countries to change legislation that is not in conformity with these Codex standards." Additionally, 13 more additives are "due to be considered" for inclusion next year, IADSA notes...
You may also be interested in...
“Critical” Codex Issues Call For U.S. Industry To Think Globally – Consultant
In "a good number of years," decisions made by the Codex Alimentarius Commission will impact legislation in the U.S., according to industry veteran Peter Berry Ottaway
Pharma Can Pursue Claims Against Providers For 340B Duplicate Discounts In Medicaid Managed Care, HRSA Says
The statement, which is part of a final rule on the 340B administrative dispute resolution process, could facilitate manufacturer efforts to seek repayments from hospitals in such cases.
The Aspirin Test For AI?
US FDA Commissioner Robert Califf tells Congress that regulators don’t have to know how artificial intelligence works in medicine, but must make very sure it actually does work.