22 Sept 2013, The National Health and Family Planning Commission of People’s Republic of China (formerly the Ministry of Health) has published a notice inviting comments on the approval of 1 new food contact additive.
The new food contact additive to be approved is titanium dioxide reacted with octyltriethoxysilane and the approved use is plastic, rubber and adhesive.
The update history of the positive list of food contact additives is listed as follows:
Year of Issue | Regulation or Notice | No. of food contact additives approved |
2013 | MOH Notice 2013-168 | 1(Draft) |
2013 | MOH Notice 2013-32 | 4(Draft) |
2013 | MOH Notice 2013-5 | 258 |
2012 | MOH Notice 2012-11 | 3 |
2012 | MOH Notice 2012-5 | 301 |
2011 | MOH Notice 2011-10 | List of 107 Resins for FCMs |
2008 | GB 9685-2008 | 959 |
If you would like to get the English version of GB 9685-2008 and the lists of all newly approved food contact additives, please complete this order form .
Reference
Background Info and Update History
The Article 32 & 62 of China Food Safety Law prohibits the importation, use or purchase of food-related products (e.g., food additive, food packaging materials) not complying with applicable Chinese Food Safety Standards. The most important food safety standard for food contact additive is GB 9685-2008 Hygienic Standard for Use of Additives in Food Containers and Packaging Materials and it includes 959 approved food contact additives(including monomers) and this standard is regarded as a positive list of food contact additives in China. Food contact additives that are not on the positive list must be approved by health authorities first.
However, when the standard was issued in 2008, it received strong complaints from industry because many other food contact additives that had been approved in EU & USA or proved to be safe were already placed on Chinese market and were not yet included in the standard. To cope with this, the MoH and other ministries jointly issued a circular in 2009 allowing industry to petition by 1 June 2010 the Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety (INFS) for the listing of substances not yet listed on GB9685-2008 or other Chinese standards which are safe for contact use. This is called ‘Grandfathering Process’. As a result of this process, the MOH reviewed submitted petitions, approved more food contact additives and resins in several batches and expanded the positive list from 959 substances to more than 1,500 food contact additives(including MOH notice 2013-32).
More info about food contact regulations and food contact notifications in China, please click here.
However, when the standard was issued in 2008, it received strong complaints from industry because many other food contact additives that had been approved in EU & USA or proved to be safe were already placed on Chinese market and were not yet included in the standard. To cope with this, the MoH and other ministries jointly issued a circular in 2009 allowing industry to petition by 1 June 2010 the Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety (INFS) for the listing of substances not yet listed on GB9685-2008 or other Chinese standards which are safe for contact use. This is called ‘Grandfathering Process’. As a result of this process, the MOH reviewed submitted petitions, approved more food contact additives and resins in several batches and expanded the positive list from 959 substances to more than 1,500 food contact additives(including MOH notice 2013-32).
More info about food contact regulations and food contact notifications in China, please click here.
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Ms. Cathy Yu, Senior Consultant, Food Safety Regulation, CIRS China11F Dongguan Building, 288 Qiuyi Road, Binjiang District, Hangzhou, China, 310020
Tel : +86 571 8720 6538 | Fax : +86 571 8720 6533
Email: cathy.yu@cirs-group.com