A Regulatory Update on Animal Feed and Feed Additives in the EU, China and USA Conference - London, UK - December 10-11, 2015
DUBLIN, Sept. 08, 2015 /PRNewswire/ --
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/44qdls/a_regulatory) has announced the addition of the "A Regulatory Update on Animal Feed and Feed Additives in the EU, China and USA (London, UK - December 10-11, 2015)" conference to their offering.
This conference will review EU legislation, examine procedures and data requirements, and discuss to what extent EFSA-compliant data can be used to achieve approvals in China and the USA (or vice versa). Re-evaluation by the EU of around 500 feed additives started in 2010 and the EU is systematically prohibiting feed additives for which no re-evaluation dossier was submitted, or which fail the European Food Safety Authority's (EFSA) scrutiny. A new feed regulation, the feed material register and the catalogue of feed materials have improved transparency in feed labelling, while allowing some physiological and functional claims.
Depending on intended use, the US FDA may regulate a product added to animal feed as either a drug or a feed ingredient. In either case, the Food Drug and Cosmetic Act requires the sponsor to obtain FDA approval or GRAS recognition prior to marketing. In the past, FDA has followed a policy of enforcement discretion to allow marketing of unapproved products if evaluated by the AAFCO feed ingredient definition process and listed in the Official Publication. The FDA now encourages sponsors to use the food additive petition procedure for new products.
The Chinese Ministry of Agriculture introduced new guidance and legislation on feed additives, adopting some aspects of EU/EFSA, other aspects of USA FDA, and some uniquely Chinese approaches in the area of animal nutrition. For these reasons many companies manufacturing or marketing feed additives wish to address, as far as possible, the regulatory requirements of EU, US and Chinese authorities in a single project. As part of this conference, Informal workshops will enable delegates to work together to solve regulatory problems.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/44qdls/a_regulatory
Media Contact: Laura Wood , +353-1-481-1716, press@researchandmarkets.net
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