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Listen to this siteTuesday 6 January 2009
The Agency is reviewing its dietary advice to consumers on fish consumption to take into account nutrition, food safety and wider sustainability issues. We would welcome your comments about our proposed approach to include these wider aspects in future advice on fish consumption.
Lynn Beverley
Food Standards Agency Scotland
6th Floor, St. Magnus House
25 Guild Street
Aberdeen
AB11 6NJ
Tel:
01224 285151
E-mail:
lynn.beverley@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
Responses are requested by: 1 April 2009
The key areas highlighted in this consultation are:
It is not the Agency’s role to regulate the UK fishing industry or advise on its practices (other than in terms of the EU Food Hygiene Regulations), or offer a new definition of sustainability in relation to fish stocks.
Other Government departments, international bodies and stakeholders are already active in this area. The Agency wants to support and draw on their work, and not duplicate it.
The Agency’s current advice to consumers is to eat at least two portions of fish a week, one of which should be oily fish. (A list of common types of white and oily fish is available on the Agency’s 'eatwell' website - see link below). The advice also covers maximum intakes of oily fish. A ‘portion’ is defined as 140g, the average fish portion size consumed by adults recorded in the National Diet and Nutrition Survey of adults, 2000/01 1 . In light of the Agency’s commitment to sustainable development and in response to comments from stakeholders (including recommendations from the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution 2 and the Sustainable Consumption Roundtable 3 ) the Agency is reviewing this advice to include sustainability in its policy making. The aim is to produce integrated dietary advice that takes into account environmental, economic and social (including nutrition and food safety) aspects of sustainability.
The purpose of this consultation is to seek your views on an approach to including these aspects in the Agency’s current advice. This review has not reopened the scientific evidence on nutrition and safety as these have already been thoroughly examined by the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition (SACN) and the Committee on Toxicity (COT). Their conclusions are published in the joint report ‘Advice of Fish Consumption: Benefits and Risks’ (2004), and are summarised in the enclosed draft Impact Assessment. This advice applies only to the consumption of fish and does not include shellfish.
Two possible approaches appear most practical:
These are considered in more depth in the consultation letter and draft impact assessment.
The consultation seeks views in several areas, in particular:
The outcome of this consultation will inform the development of clear, integrated advice to consumers on eating fish. This will update the information already available on the Agency’s websites and that used in future work on healthier eating.
1
Henderson et al, The National Diet and Nutrition Survey: adults aged 19-64 years, Vols 1-5, TSO 2002-04. See link below.
2
Twenty-fifth report of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution "Turning the Tide" 2004
3
"I will if you will – Towards sustainable consumption" May 2006
4
Food assurance schemes Guidance Notes (See link below)
5
See for example (External)
Defra’s Fisheries 2027: a long term vision for sustainable fisheries'
6
(External)
Cabinet Office, July 2008.
This consultation has been prepared in accordance with the (External) HM Government Code of Practice on Consultation , which states that a consultation must follow better regulation best practice, including carrying out an Impact Assessment (Regulatory Impact Assessment in Scotland). The assessment is included in the consultation documents.
We are interested in what you thought of this consultation and would therefore welcome your general feedback on both the consultation package and overall consultation process. If you would like to assist us to improve the quality of future consultations, please feel free to share your thoughts with us by using the consultation feedback questionnaire.
Download word Consultation feedback questionnaire (Word)
Download pdf Consultation feedback questionnaire (pdf)
In accordance with the FSA principle of openness our Information Centre at Aviation House will hold a copy of the completed consultation. The FSA will publish a summary of responses, which may include personal data, such as your full name. Disclosure of any other personal data would be made only upon request for the full consultation responses. If you do not want this information to be released, please complete and return the Publication of Personal Data Form. Return of this form does not mean that we will treat your response to the consultation as confidential, just your personal data.
Download word Data protection form (Word)
Download pdf Data protection form (pdf)
Within three months of a consultation ending we aim to publish a summary of responses received and provide a link to it from this page.
If, after three months, the summary is still not showing, please contact the person who was responsible for the original consultation. Alternatively, you can contact the FSA Consultation Co-ordinator by email: consultationcoordinator@foodstandards.gsi.gov.uk
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