New U.S. food label rules to require
added sugars to be detailed
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[May 21, 2016]
By Lisa Baertlein
(Reuters) - The United States plans a
major overhaul of the way packaged foods are labeled, the Food and Drug
Administration announced on Friday. Serving sizes will be adjusted to
reflect how much people actually eat, and for the first time labels will
list added sugars.
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A view shows the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) headquarters in
Silver Spring, Maryland August 14, 2012. Picture taken August 14, 2012.
REUTERS/Jason Reed |
These are the first significant changes since the Nutrition Facts
label was introduced more than 20 years ago. They come as an
increasing number of Americans battle obesity, diabetes and heart
disease and will affect roughly 800,000 products from Coca-Cola and
ice-cream to soup and spaghetti sauce.
Speaking at a health summit in Washington, first lady Michelle Obama
said she was "thrilled" about the new label and said she believes it
is going to make "a real difference in providing families across the
country the information they need to make healthy choices." Her
"Let's Move!" initiative aims to increase the health of young
people.
Manufacturers have until July 2018 to comply with the new rule.
Small businesses with fewer than $10 million in annual sales have an
additional year to comply. The FDA, which first proposed the rule in
2014, estimated at the time that the cost to industry of updating
the labels would be about $2 billion.
The Grocery Manufacturers Association, which represents the world's
biggest food and drink companies, said the changes were "timely," as
diets and eating patterns have changed dramatically over the past
two decades.
"Food and beverage manufacturers have responded by creating more
than 30,000 healthier product choices since 2002," Dr. Leon Bruner,
GMA's chief science officer, said in a statement.
Under the new rules, companies will have to provide details on the
amount of added sugar such as corn syrup and white and brown sugar.
The Sugar Association, which represents U.S. sugar cane farmers,
refiners, sugar beet farmers and processors, said it was
"disappointed" at the requirement to list added sugars on the label
and said the FDA had not demonstrated a scientific link between
sugar and disease.
Information about calories from fat will be removed because research
shows the type of fat is more important than the amount, the FDA
said.
The new rules require serving sizes on the label to reflect what, on
average, consumers actually eat. About 20 percent of all package
labels will be adjusted, the FDA said. Some, such as ice-cream will
be adjusted upwards, while others, such as yogurt, will be adjusted
downwards.
"What and how much people eat and drink has changed since the last
serving size requirements were published in 1993," the agency said.
HOW WILL CONSUMERS REACT?
It was unclear how much the new label will actually impact consumer
behavior.
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Professor Jeremy Kees, a nutrition label expert at Villanova
University School of Business who has consulted for both the FDA and
industry, said he believes the impact will be "relatively small"
because the information is on the back of the package.
"I think front of pack labeling has more potential to have a bigger
impact on consumers," he said.
Some changes have already been made, analysts say.
"Carbonated soft drinks have been on the decline before any of this
happened," said Darren Seifer, an analyst at The NPD Group, a market
research company. "It might not make it exponentially greater, but
it may help sustain it."
The largest U.S. chocolate maker, The Hershey Company <HSY.N>, said
it "will work diligently to make the necessary updates to our
Nutrition Facts labels as requested by the FDA."
In the United States more than one-third of adults and about 17
percent of youth aged 2 to 19 are obese, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Obesity-related conditions include heart disease, stroke, type 2
diabetes and certain types of cancer, some of the leading causes of
preventable death. The estimated annual medical cost of obesity in
the U.S. was $147 billion in 2008 U.S. dollars, according to Centers
for Disease Control.
The FDA estimated the cost to industry of updating the labels at
about $2 billion and the benefit to consumers at between $20 billion
to $30 billion.
(Additional reporting by Dipika Jain, Sruthi Ramakrishnan, Melissa
Fares and Chris Prentice; editing by Phil Berlowitz and Cynthia
Osterman)
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