logo

News

12-12-2019 | FSA 'Confirms' it will enforce CBD Novel Food Rules

BACK
The newspaper reports that the regulator is alarmed by the boom in CBD food, supplement and cosmetic products and says it “expects companies to comply with the novel foods process, which includes submitting safety information about their products”.

The classification of CBD as Novel Food has been roundly criticised by large parts of the natural products industry in the UK, with one CBD trade group previously declaring that it, along with its members, would defy FSA efforts to enforce compliance with Novel Food rules.

While the FSA says it continues to seek a “proportionate” approach to regulating CBD products, its view, restated the week, that Novel Foods rules apply to many CBD products currently on sale – including requirements on companies to put products through pre-market assessment and obtain  authorisations – will worry industry.

Shannett Thompson, a senior associate at the legal firm Kingsley Napley, told The Times: “Any products that have not been assessed and authorised could technically be removed from the shelves by trading standards officers.” She said this situation was likely to continue in the UK, even after  Britain leaves the EU. 

“Push for medicines control of CBD should be resisted”
One of the campaign groups that has been warning about penalties for consumers and industry of “disproportionate” regulation of CBD and hemp products is Alliance for Natural Health International. In a new assessment of the subject, the group warns that the “push for medicines control and novel food exclusion of CBD” on both sides of Atlantic” must be challenged.

ANH founder & executive coordinator, Robert Verkerk PhD (pictured), writes: “There is nothing new or novel about CBD. Our endocannabinoid system is built to respond to it when it’s produced internally and, surprise, surprise, certain plants also produce it. No one’s planned to ban soya because of the phytoestrogen levels, despite much less evidence of benefit and more pointing to potential risks, as compared with hemp and CBD.

“The twist of the law that the regulators have found argues that new, more powerful extraction methods, such as supercritical extraction which relies on carbon dioxide, are being applied to concentrate the CBD at levels considerably above those found in seed oil. This is true – but concentration of oils, including supercritical extractions, has been used for years in a gamut of other edible plant oils.

“…While there may be real concerns about the quality of some CBD extracts on the market, the (mis)use of novel food law to raise safety concerns, is nothing short of a ruse.”

Source:  https://www.naturalproductsglobal.com/

Jim Manson  3 December 2019


Health Issues

Anger is a normal emotion that everyone feels from time to time.

VIEW MORE

Excessive facial hair is a touchy subject with many women; those who suffer from this condition have a low self-esteem

VIEW MORE

Maca (Lepidum meyenii, Brassicaceae), a root vegetable grown in the Andean region of Peru, is widely used for its nutritional and therapeutic properties. Maca is said to improve male and female reproductive activity in diverse ways, from increasing arousal and reducing symptoms of menopause to boosting sperm quality,

VIEW MORE