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New Food Labels Would Highlight Calories And Sugar


nfThose “Nutrition Facts” labels that are plastered on nearly every food package found in grocery stores are getting a new look.

Calories would be in larger, bolder type, and consumers for the first time would know whether foods have added sugars under label changes being proposed by the Obama administration. Serving sizes would be updated to make them more realistic. A serving of ice cream, for example, would double to a full cup, closer to what people actually eat.

The proposed overhaul comes as science has shifted. While fat was the focus two decades ago when the labels first were created, nutritionists are now more concerned with how many calories we eat. And serving sizes have long been misleading, with many single-serving packages listing multiple servings, so the calorie count is lower.

The idea isn’t that people should eat more; it’s that they should understand how many calories are in what they are actually eating. The Food and Drug Administration says that by law, serving sizes must be based on actual consumption, not ideal consumption.

“Our guiding principle here is very simple, that you as a parent and a consumer should be able to walk into your local grocery store, pick up an item off the shelf and be able to tell whether it’s good for your family,” said first lady Michelle Obama, who was to join the Food and Drug Administration in announcing the proposed changes Thursday at the White House.

Mrs. Obama was making the announcement as part of her Let’s Move initiative to combat child obesity, which is celebrating its fourth anniversary. On Tuesday, she announced new Agriculture Department rules that would reduce marketing of unhealthy foods in schools.

The new nutrition labels are likely several years away. The FDA will take comments on the proposal for 90 days, and a final rule could take another year. Once it’s final, the agency has proposed giving industry two years to comply.

The FDA projects food companies will have to pay around $2 billion as they change the labels.

The Grocery Manufacturers Association, the industry group that represents the nation’s largest food companies, did not respond to any specific parts of the proposal but called it a “thoughtful review.”

President Pamela Bailey also said it was important to the food companies that the labels “ultimately serve to inform, and not confuse, consumers.”

It was still not yet clear what the final labels would look like. The FDA offered two labels in its proposal — one that looks similar to the current version but is shorter and clearer and another that groups the nutrients into a “quick facts” category for things like fat, carbohydrates, sugars and proteins. There also would be an “avoid too much” category for saturated fats, trans fats, cholesterol, sodium and added sugars; and a “get enough” section with vitamin D, potassium, calcium, iron and fiber.

Both versions list calories above all of those nutrients in a large, bold type.

The proposed rules would also overhaul serving sizes for soda and single-serving packages. Both 12-ounce and 20-ounce sodas would be considered one serving, and many single-serving packages — a bag of chips, a can of soup or a frozen entree, for example — would either be listed as a single serving or list nutrient information by serving and by container.

The inclusion of added sugars to the label was one of the biggest revisions. Nutrition advocates have long asked for that line on the label because it’s impossible for consumers to know how much sugar in an item is naturally occurring, like that in fruit and dairy products, and how much is added by the manufacturer. Think an apple vs. apple sauce, which comes in sweetened and unsweetened varieties.

According to the Agriculture Department’s 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, added sugars contribute an average of 16 percent of the total calories in U.S. diets. Though those naturally occurring sugars and the added sugars act the same in the body, the USDA says the added sugars are just empty calories while naturally occurring ones usually come along with other nutrients.

David Kessler, who was FDA commissioner when the first Nutrition Facts labels were unveiled in the early 1990s, said he thinks focusing on added sugars and calories will have a “demonstrative public health benefit.”

Kessler said the added sweetness, like added salt, drives overeating. And companies will adjust their recipes to get those numbers down.

“No food company wants products to look bad,” he said.

While some may ignore the panels, there’s evidence that more people are reading them in recent years as there has been a heightened interest in nutrition.

A USDA study released earlier this year said 42 percent of working adults used the panel always or most of the time in 2009 and 2010, up from 34 percent two years earlier. Older adults were more likely to use it.

(AP)



7 Responses

  1. It would be a great thing if thunder thighs Obama would just shut up and go back to her hole in the ground. This is yet another example of how the Obama administration despises businesses. It costs lots and lots of money to make changes on food labels. They have to send it to the FDA for approval they they have to change the plates to print the new labels. This costs a lot of money and it is a waste of money for no good reason!!!

  2. Can’t they take a piece of corn or something, break it down into molecules and atoms and then turn it into anything at all that they want? Then just label the ingredient as corn?
    So basically they can put absolutely anything at all into the food in that way and it would still be perfectly legal as long as they listed the original ingredient right?
    If they CAN do it, this government IS doing it, and not for good reasons.

  3. Re Comment No. 1: Can you provide us with any actual information about the cost of complying with the food-labeling requirements of the FDA? How much does it add to the cost of any particular food? Or should we just assume that you are correct?

    And would you please identify the portion of Torah that permits you to insult a woman’s physical appearance, which I believe is what you intended by the words “thunder thighs Obama.” And would you also tell us where and when, if ever, you saw the First Lady’s thighs (and why you looked), as I have never seen a photograph revealing her thighs.

    Your persistent but baseless insults of President and Mrs. Obama lead me to believe that your objections to the President’s policies are likewise baseless and spring from some inner personal weakness.

  4. Nfgzero,

    I work in the food industry. I know what I’m talking about. I see it EVERY day.

    You don’t like it? Go back to the daily kooks site.

  5. No. 4: So, your objection to revised food-labeling requirements is prompted, in part, by self-interest? Shouldn’t you have disclosed that in your first comment?

  6. Nfgzero

    I was at four clients today, two of which have literally THOUSANDS of SKUs between them. Since you don’t know what a SKU is, pay attention and I will tell you. A SKU is a product label so between them they have THOUSANDS of products.

    At one they brought it up to me and I asked how much it costs to redo a label. They said there is so much wasted money when it comes to changes with the nutrition panel, the thought of submitting so many labels is making them rethink and just drop at least a third of their items.

    Even those that they do keep will cost more money because the printing plates need to be changed and that costs even more.

    So I do know what I’m talking about. As a socialist liberal democrat you think you’re soooo smart because you learned something in school. Out here in Realville, things operate for REAL not like the books claim they would.

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