EFSA to contribute funds for allergen project

By Joseph James Whitworth

- Last updated on GMT

Picture: iStock
Picture: iStock

Related tags European union Food allergy European food safety authority

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has called for projects related to detection and quantification of allergens in foods.

The thematic grant call also includes minimum eliciting doses in food allergic individuals.

EFSA provides a co-funding rate of 50% for a project period of up to four years, and a maximum contribution of €375,000 per project.

Proposals need to be submitted by a consortium of at least two organisations from at least two different EU countries, Norway or Iceland.

The aim is to encourage scientific cooperation among Member States and support the exchange of expertise and best practice.

One of the organisations must be identified as the consortium leader (applicant). The applicant is responsible for identifying the other consortium partner(s).

EFSA only indicates the theme for proposals to give applicants and partners the possibility of defining and developing their own projects.

In a scientific opinion on the evaluation of allergenic foods and food ingredients for labelling purposes (NDA Panel, 2014), EFSA identified a series of data (and technology) gaps in scientific knowledge.

These may hamper food allergen risk assessment in the future, as well as enforcement of a labelling system based on threshold concentrations of allergens in foods, added the agency.

Eligible applicants from this list​ of organisations can submit proposals by 25 October.

Call for experts and Japan visit

From June, EFSA will open registration for experts to join its ten scientific panels and scientific committee.

The application procedure ends on 8 September 2017 with membership renewal from July 2018.

EFSA also recently visited the Food Safety Commission of Japan (FSCJ) for the fifth bilateral meeting in the last five years.

The French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety (ANSES) and the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) were also present.

The delegation took part in an international conference jointly organised by FSCJ and EFSA.

The focus was to identify key priorities and areas for cooperation between the EU, Japan and countries in Southeast Asia.

Bernhard Url, EFSA executive director, said there was a strong focus on cooperation.

“We were pleased to pass on our experience of cross-border efforts in Europe to our Japanese and Southeast Asian colleagues. We were able to learn too from the needs and successes of our Asian partners and identify some key projects for further cooperation.”

Related news

Show more

Related products

show more

Replace Synthetic Preservatives

Replace Synthetic Preservatives

Content provided by Corbion | 08-Apr-2024 | Insight Guide

With 36% of European consumers wary of food additives, particularly preservatives 1, offering a clean label is crucial. Corbion provides a better way...

Download the Blue Food Innovation Summit Brochure

Download the Blue Food Innovation Summit Brochure

Content provided by Rethink Events Ltd | 28-Mar-2024 | Application Note

The Blue Food Innovation Summit brings together leaders at the forefront of investing in and developing solutions for nature-positive, resilient aquaculture...

 Four actionable steps to reduce allergen recalls

Four actionable steps to reduce allergen recalls

Content provided by FoodChain ID | 10-Oct-2023 | White Paper

Failing to mitigate allergen risks has serious consequences - not just for consumer safety, poor allergen procedures can also cause financial losses and...

Is your brand reputation at risk?

Is your brand reputation at risk?

Content provided by FoodChain ID | 21-Sep-2023 | White Paper

FoodChain ID has developed a new white paper, “Current Food Supply Chain Threats - Is Your Company's Brand Reputation at Risk?” examining recent regulatory...

1 comment

Smart allergen information

Posted by Andrew Manly,

There are already some intelligent packaging devices to help with 'on pack' allergen warnings and advice. These should be taken into account when this whole thing is debated. At present they seem to have been ignored or overlooked. Missing an opportunity?

Report abuse

Follow us

Products

View more

Webinars