Codex
Alimentarius – A Threat to your Vitamin Supplements?
by Paul Anthony Taylor
March 22, 2004
Introduction by Sepp (Josef) Hasslberger
Codex Alimentarius is an
international standard-setting body dealing with how to safely
process and store food products, avoiding hazards to our
health. For about ten years, the Codex Committee on Nutrition
and Foods for Special Dietary Uses has been mulling over a
guideline for vitamin and mineral supplements, originally
proposed by the German delegation to this committee,
presumably to eliminate dangers from these additions of vital
nutrients to our nutrition.
So far so good, but what dangers exactly are we talking about?
When statistical evidence indicates that food supplements are
by far the safest category of products in existence, why do we
need regulations?
Could it be that pharmaceutical drugs, recently shown to be a
leading cause of death in the Western world, are losing
ground, that the pharmaceutical business is on its way out? If
so, might it just be that the proponents of pharmaceutical
drug "treatment" of disease could be leaning on legislators to
eliminate what they perceive to be the cause of their woes -
the natural way to health by proper nutrition?
However that may be, Paul Taylor has examined the question of
Codex Alimentarius and the threat this international
legislative body's deliberations may pose to our health by
"regulating" supplements of vital nutrients in a most
restrictive way.
Codex Alimentarius – A threat to your
vitamin supplements?
By Paul Anthony Taylor
Have you ever wondered what would happen if a group of
legislators from 48 different countries got together to talk
about nutrition and food? Probably not, as most of us have
more important things to think about. Presumably though, they
would sit down and discuss the importance of diet, nutrition
and the prevention of chronic diseases, and then try to figure
out ways to help us all to live longer, healthier lives.
Right?
Wrong, unfortunately. Welcome to the world of the ‘Codex
Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses’,
where the committee chairman talks about pharmaceutical drugs
preventing diseases and the EU representative states that food
and the prevention of diseases do not go together. If you’re
the type of person who prefers processed food and who wouldn’t
be seen dead in a health food shop, then you can relax and
stop reading now, because Codex is definitely not a threat to
your life style. But if you’re the sort who prefers natural
healthcare to pharmaceutical drugs, and who supplements his or
her diet with high doses of multi-vitamins and minerals then
you could soon have a great deal to worry about, because Codex
is a direct threat to your way of life.
So what is Codex?
The Codex Alimentarius Commission is the international body
charged with setting global food standards, and is jointly
sponsored by the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Codex Alimentarius literally means "food code", and the
Commission was set up in 1963 to protect the health of
consumers, ensure fair practices in international food trade
and to co-ordinate all international food standards work.
The legal basis for the enforcement of the guidelines and
standards created by Codex dates back to the mid-1990s, when
Codex Alimentarius signed agreements with the World Trade
Organization (WTO) by which Codex creates trade standards that
the WTO uses to resolve international trade disputes.
That all sounds fine, you are probably thinking. But how on
earth could Codex possibly affect me when I want to buy
vitamins, minerals and other nutrients?
Good question.
In fact, with the exception of co-ordinating international
food standards work Codex doesn’t do any of the things that it
was set up to do. The health of consumers is not being
protected by the work of Codex, and the international trade in
food is anything but fair. Nowhere is this more apparent than
in what Codex is trying to do to the international
availability of vitamins and minerals (which come under the
definition of food at Codex), where it is attempting to pass a
variation on the extraordinarily restrictive EU Food
Supplements Directive as the blueprint for the global
regulation of food supplements.
The EU Food Supplements Directive, for those who are unaware
of it, was passed by the EU Parliament in March 2002, and will
be fully implemented on 1st August 2005. An extremely
controversial piece of legislation, it will ban, on grounds of
safety, almost 300 forms of vitamins and minerals from being
sold within the EU - many of which have been sold for decades
and are the same forms of nutrients that are found in food
itself. So contentious, in fact, is this legislation that two
cases challenging the legality of the ban have recently been
referred to the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg by the
UK High Court.
Nevertheless, the EU is the single most important influence
upon the Codex discussions, and Basil Mathioudakis, who was
responsible for drafting the text of the EU Food Supplements
Directive, is the head of the European Commission delegation
at meetings of the ‘Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for
Special Dietary Uses’. Once the 10 new candidate countries
join the EU in May 2004 Mr Mathioudakis will be representing a
total of 25 EU Member States at Codex, and whenever he
exercises his right to vote the 25 Member States will not be
entitled to exercise theirs. As such it is very likely that
the EU will be able to wield a block vote at the next Codex
meeting consisting of almost one half of all of the countries
attending.
Worse still, of the 48 countries who attended the previous
meeting of the ‘Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for
Special Dietary Uses’ in November 2003, only one of them,
South Africa, is actively opposing these restrictive proposals
for the world-wide availability of vitamins and mineral
supplements. Democratically of course, since the EU, with its
soon-to-be population of 450 million people, is allowed 25
votes at Codex, then large countries such as the United
States, with its population of over 280 million people, should
proportionately be given at least 15 votes. Under the Codex
voting system however the United States is only allowed one
vote, which means that the EU is now in an extremely powerful
position.
As a result, the Codex vitamin and mineral restrictions could
possibly be finalized this coming November in Bonn, Germany.
If this happens the effect upon the aforementioned legal
challenges to the EU Food Supplements Directive could be grave
to say the least, because if the Codex restrictions were
agreed before the legal challenge was completed the UK lawyers
would in essence be arguing for the European Court of Justice
to overturn legislation that was fully in line with a newly
agreed global standard. Moreover, even if the legal challenges
to the EU Food Supplements Directive are successful the Codex
proposals could still be implemented as the global standard,
thus effectively overruling any short-term victory for health
freedom in the EU. As such, a finalized Codex text would have
the ability to override the dietary supplement laws of all
countries, including the United States.
Long-term, it would not be unreasonable to expect that other
EU health-related legislation, such as restrictive regulations
on nutrition and health claims, will become the blueprints for
still further standards to be enacted by Codex on a globally
harmonized basis. Ironic isn’t it, that far from being the
protectors of our health, our governments and legislators now
appear to be one of the biggest risks to it?
If you wish to contact the
Author:
Paul Anthony Taylor
paulandpolly@btinternet.com
Tel: +44 (0)1325-466361
Cell: +44 (0)7903-73834