EurActiv Logo
Actualités & débats européens
- dans votre langue -
Click here for EU news »
EurActiv.com Réseau

TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

Danone retire ses demandes sanitaires pour ses yaourts

Publié 16 avril 2010 - Mis à jour 26 novembre 2010
Version imprimableSend by email

Le groupe alimentaire français Danone a retiré sa demande de validation sanitaire de deux de ses yaourts les plus vendus jeudi (15 avril), expliquant son geste par la confusion qui règne à propos des preuves scientifiques nécessaires demandées à l'entreprise dans le cadre du processus pour valider cette demande.

The world's largest maker of yoghurts said it would remove from a European review two applications on health claims it makes on Activia and Actimel.

Activia is a yoghurt that Danone claims "aids digestion", and its dairy drink Actimel is claimed to help "strengthen the body's defences".

The decision comes as several brokers recently voiced concern that the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) might reject Danone's health claims, saying this could hurt the group's image and stock price.

EFSA is the responsible EU body for verifying the scientific substantiation of the submitted claims.

Danone can still print the health claims on Activia and Actimel, but it has stopped advertising the claims in some countries, including France and Britain.

The outcome of the EFSA review is closely watched by investors, as validation of Danone's health claims would be a strong marketing tool for the company, whose strategy focuses on well differentiated dairy brands with a health proposition, sold often at a higher price.

Chief Financial Officer Pierre-Andre Terisse said that Danone's decision to eventually re-apply for the health claims would depend on whether the EFSA's requirements to validate the claims were sufficiently clarified at a meeting slated for 1 June.

For Danone, the EFSA review process has not been a smooth road. In April 2009, it already withdrew its applications regarding Activia and Actimel as there was confusion about what data the EFSA needed. Danone filed new applications covering the two products late last year and early this year.

EU decision-makers adopted a regulation on the use of nutrition and health claims for foods in December 2006. The regulation lays down harmonised EU-wide rules for the use of such claims on foodstuffs based on nutrient profiles. One of the key objectives of the EU law is to prevent unfounded claims on food packages.

(EurActiv with Reuters.)

Contexte : 

Food packages often carry health or nutritional claims, such as 'reduces cholesterol' or 'low fat'. Some of these claims can be misleading to consumers who cannot interpret the more scientific nutritional tables.

EU legislation on health and nutrition claims made on food, which entered into force in July 2007, introduced procedures for the substantiation of claims and restricted the use of certain types of claim.

A lire aussi

More in this section

Publicité