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【Australia】Allergen labelling

Last updated: July 2022

Some foods and ingredients can cause allergic reactions including anaphylaxis, immune reactions such as in Coeliac disease, and other adverse health reactions such as asthma. In February 2021, new plain English allergen labelling requirements were introduced for how certain foods known to be common allergens are declared. These changes will mean food allergen information is clearer and easier to find on food labels.  

Food businesses have three years to update their labels to meet the new requirements. You can expect to see changes fully introduced by February 2024. 

What must be declared

The food and ingredients listed below will need to be declared in the ingredient list when they are present using the exact name (from Table 1 below) and bolded text. For example cheese (milk) or milk powder. As indicated in the table, the new requirements also mean that individual tree nuts, molluscs and individual cereals must all be declared separately.

Table 1: Foods and ingredients to be declared (using these names)

wheat

soy, soya, soybean

pistachio

fish

sesame

pine nut

crustacean

almond

walnut

mollusc

Brazil nut

barley*

egg

cashew

oats*

milk

hazelnut

rye*

lupin

macadamia

sulphites**

peanut

pecan



*  Barley, oats and rye must be declared if they contain gluten.

** Sulphites must be declared when added in amounts equal to or more than 10 milligrams per kilogram of food. 

A bolded, separate allergen summary statement starting with the word 'contains' will also need to be provided near the ingredient list to help quickly identify any allergens present. For example 'Contains milk'.

If a cereal containing gluten such as wheat, barley, oats and rye, (including hybrids of these cereals such as triticale) is present, the label will need to identify this in the summary statement using the word 'gluten'.

If the food is not in packaging or does not need to have a label, the information must be displayed with the food or can be requested from the supplier. For example, by asking about allergens in food prepared and sold from a takeaway shop.

Product exemptions

Some food can be manufactured in a way that makes it safe to be eaten by people with allergies and does not need to have allergens declared.

To find out more, see product exemptions from allergen labelling.

Bee products

If a food contains bee pollen, propolis or royal jelly they must be labelled with either a warning or advisory statement. To find out more, see warning and advisory statements.

'May contain' statements

Some food labels use 'may contain' or 'may be present' statements to indicate the possible unintended presence of allergens occurring during food manufacture, such as 'may contain milk'. This is also known as precautionary allergen labelling (PAL). These are voluntary statements made by food suppliers and the Food Standards Code does not regulate them.

 
Article and Picture Source:Food Standards Australia & New Zealand
 
 

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