Lords find no evidence “vegetarian burgers” are misleading for consumers

The House of Lords EU Energy and Environment Sub-Committee have raised concerns over an EU amendment to ban the use of words like "sausage" and "burger" to describe foods that don’t contain meat
calendar icon 29 July 2019
clock icon 2 minute read

The House of Lords EU Energy and Environment Sub-Committee have raised concerns that an EU amendment to ban the use of words like ‘sausage’ and ‘burger’ to describe foods that don’t contain meat would in fact:

  • Reduce consumer clarity
  • Be a barrier to growth for a burgeoning sector of the food industry
  • Ultimately make it more challenging for people to reduce the amount of meat in their diet at a time when Government should be seeking to encourage the opposite.

The Committee heard no evidence that consumers had felt they were misled by meat-free products and less than 4 percent of people had ever unintentionally bought a vegetarian product instead of a meat free version. Further, witnesses were unanimous in the view that current naming conventions around vegetarian burgers and sausages in particular are clear and easy to understand.

The Committee therefore challenge the stated justification of the amendment to “prohibit certain commercial practices that are misleading for consumers” and contest that without evidence of a problem, legislative action by the EU is unnecessary and would undermine EU policy objectives on climate change, the environment and public health.

Read the full letter

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