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						 French 
						baguette faces pinch from anti-salt lawmakers 
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		[August 30, 2018]  
		PARIS (Reuters) - France's beloved bread 
		loaf, the baguette, may be about to lose some of its bite, with 
		politicians looking into the health risks of additives set to propose 
		legislation forcing bakers and processed food makers more generally to 
		slash salt content. | 
        
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			 After months of investigation and hearings, a parliamentary 
			committee has come to the conclusion that voluntary agreements on 
			the reduction of high salt levels have not been respected and that 
			it is time to impose healthier norms via legislation. 
 That committee is due to present its proposals in September but the 
			drift of what is on the way was made clear on Wednesday by key 
			people involved in the deliberations.
 
 "It's a real public health problem," said Loic Prud'homme, one of a 
			20-member parliamentary committee looking into the matter.
 
			
			 
			Michele Crouzet, another committee member, said the daily intake of 
			salt in France, at about 10 to 12 grams, is still double the limit 
			recommended by the World Health Organization.
 Excessive salt levels are linked to cardiovascular trouble, which in 
			France is the second-biggest killer among health problems.
 
 Crouzet said the committee could propose a tax on salt like one 
			already introduced in France on the sugar content of fizzy drinks. 
			But some say that levy has been ineffective because manufacturers 
			are shifting to other forms of sweetener.
 
 "What we can now say is that voluntary agreements do not work and 
			it's now time to switch to binding constraints," Prud'homme told 
			Reuters.
 
			
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			In the case of the baguette, and bread more generally, voluntary 
			agreements struck in 2002 had sought to limit the salt level to 18 
			grams per kilo of flour within five years, he said. Some 16 years 
			later, that goal had still not been met.
 "In any event what's certain is that it's now time to move via 
			sturdy legislation, which could involve setting constraints in gram 
			terms for salt," he said in a separate interview on a public service 
			radio station, francinfo.
 
 A report to be presented by the committee will also seek to tackle 
			excessive use of other additives in processed food and pre-prepared 
			meals, and seek curbs on advertising that aims to promote 
			less-than-healthy food among children, said Prud'homme.
 
 (Reporting by Brian Love and Elizabeth Pineau; Editing by Andrew 
			Bolton)
 
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