Novel food is defined as a type of food that does not have a significant history of consumption or is produced by a method that has not previously been used for food.
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Novel foods or novel food ingredients have no history of “significant” consumption in the European Union prior to 15 May 1997. Any food or food ingredient that falls within this definition must be authorised according to the Novel Food legislation, Regulation (EC) No 258/97 of the European Parliament and of the Council.[1]
A company that wishes to submit an application under this legislation should consult the guidance document compiled by the European Commission,[2] which highlights the scientific information and the safety assessment report required in each case.
The Novel Food regulation stipulates that foods and food ingredients falling within the scope of this regulation must not:
There are two possible routes for authorization under the Novel Food legislation: a full application and a simplified application. The simplified application route is only applicable where the EU member national competent authority, e.g. Food Standards Agency (FSA) in the UK, believes that the novel food in question is substantially equivalent to an existing food or food ingredient.[3]
The FSA has provided guidance for companies that wish to submit a simplified novel food application.[4]
There have been a number of products launched as a result of food or food ingredients authorised under the Novel Food legislation. Benecol, containing phytostanols[5] and Flora ProActiv, containing phytosterols [6][7] are commercially successful products that help to reduce cholesterol levels.
Originally, the Novel Food legislation was conceived by the European Commission in response to the arrival of food products derived from GM crops. These types of GM derived food are now regulated by separate legislation, Regulation (EC) No 1829/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council.[8]
In its current format, exotic fruit and vegetables, which have a long history of safe use outside of the European Union, fall within the definition of a novel food. As a consequence, each of these food products must undergo a safety assessment prior to being marketed. This has long been an issue of contention for food manufacturers and producers outside the EU who view this as an economic trade barrier[9] .[10] A good example of this situation can be illustrated with Baobab (Adansonia digitata). This fruit is wild-harvested across Southern Africa and has a long history of use as a food amongst the indigenous tribes in this continent. Nonetheless, Baobab Dried Fruit Pulp required authorisation under the Novel Food legislation before any food products containing this ingredient could be marketed in the EU.[11]
The Baobab Dried Fruit Pulp novel food application, pioneered by John Wilkinson of Herbal Sciences International, a botanical regulatory consultancy company, together with their client Phytotrade Africa, was also the first successful submission to demonstrate safety without the need for animal testing. Instead, this application used the history of use alongside detailed analyses of the nutritional and phytochemical components in Baobab to demonstrate safety.[12] This has lowered the costs for approval from an average of 10 million euros to less than 100,000 euros and thus opened the EU to access non western fruits, vegetables and nutraceuticals while at the same time saving unnecessary animal testing.
In 2008 the three EU institutions, European Parliament, European Commission and Council of the European Union began talks to revise the regulation because it was accepted that essential elements needed to be discussed and resolved.[13]
However, the revision came to a standstill on 28 March 2011 when the three institutions failed to reach agreement at a final conciliation meeting on the issue of cloning.[14] Disagreement centred on the European Parliament being in favour of a total EU market ban on foods from clones and their offspring/descendants, while some members of the Council of the European Union were not in favour as they considered offspring to be bred using normal (or traditional) methods, therefore not falling under the definition of a novel food.[15]
According to the European Parliament it had tried to compromise, backing down on demands for a full ban on food from cloned animals and their descendants, to mandatory labelling of all food products from clones and their offspring as a bare minimum.[16] The Council of the European Union decided that the solution presented by the European Parliament could not be implemented in practice because it would not be in compliance with the international trade rules that the European Union has signed.[17]
The cloning technique is not banned at EU level,[18] and since March 2011 it has been unclear if and how the institutions will move forward on a revision of the regulation.[19] Therefore the existing novel food regulation, adopted in 1997, remains in place.
In Canada, novel foods are regulated under the Novel Foods Regulations. The regulations define novel food as
The Novel Foods Regulation requires that a company wanting to sell a novel food notify Health Canada by prior to marketing or advertising the product. Pre-market notification permits Health Canada to conduct a thorough safety assessment of all biotechnology-derived foods to demonstrate that a novel food is safe and nutritious before it is allowed in the Canadian marketplace.[20]
To date, more than 90 novel foods have been approved for sale in Canada including a number of canola, corn, cottonseed and flax crop lines. Some of the novel traits include herbicide tolerance and pest and disease resistance. In spite of the benefits brought about by the development of novel foods, there are also a number of concerns that have been raised concerning their potential impact on the environment and on human health and safety.