Section 1.
Title. - This Act shall be known as the "Philippine
Food
Fortification
Act of 2000."
Sec. 2. Declaration
of Policies. - Section 15 of Article II of the Constitution
provides that the State shall protect and promote the right of health
of
the people and instill health consciousness among them.
State recognizes
that nutritional deficiency problems in the Philippines, based on
nutrition
surveys, include deficiency in energy, iron, vitamin A, iodine, thiamin
and riboflavin. To a minor extent, the Filipino diet is also deficient
in ascorbic acid, calcium and folate.
The State recognizes
that food fortification is vital where there is a demonstrated need to
increase the intake of an essential nutrient by one or more population
groups, as manifested in dietary, biochemical or clinical evidences of
deficiency. Food fortification is considered important in the promotion
of optimal health and to compensate for the loss of nutrients due to
processing
and/or storage of food.
Food fortification,
therefore, shall carried out to compensate for the inadequacies in
Filipino
diet, based on present-day needs as measured using the most recent
Recommended
Dietary Allowances (RDA).chan
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Sec. 3. Definition
of Terms. - For purposes of this Act, the following terms shall
mean:
(a) BFAD
- the Bureau of Food and Drugs of the Department of Health.
(b) DOH
- the Department of Health.
(c) Fortification
- the addition of nutrients to processed foods or food products at
levels above the natural state. As an approach to control micronutrient
deficiency, food fortification is addition of a micronutrient,
deficiency
in the diet, to a food which is widely consumed by a specific at-risk
groups.
(d) Fortificant
- a substance, in chemical or natural form, added to food to increase
its
nutrient value.
(e) Micronutrient
- an essential nutrient required by the body in very small quantities;
recommended intakes are in milligrams or micrograms.
(f) Manufacturer
- the refinery in case of refined sugar or cooking oil, the miller in
case
of flour or rice, or the importer in case of imported processed foods
or
food products, or the processor in case of other processed foods or
foods
products.
(g) NCC
- the Governing Board of the National Nutrition Council.
(h) Nutrient
- any chemical substance needed by the body for one or more of
these
functions; to provide heat or energy, to build and repair tissues, and
to regulate life processes. Although nutrients are found chiefly in
foods,
some can be synthesized in the laboratory like vitamin and mineral
supplements
or in the body through biosynthesis.
(i) Nutrition
Facts - a statement or information on food labels indicating the
nutrient(s)
and the quantity of said nutrient found or added in the processed foods
or food products.
(j) Nutrition
labeling - a system of describing processed foods or food products
on the basis of their selected nutrient content. It aims to provide
accurate
nutrition information about each food. This is printed in food labels
as
"Nutrition Facts."
(k) Processed
food or food products - food that has been subjected to some degree
of processing like milling, drying, concentrating, canning, or addition
of some ingredients which changes partially or completely the
physico-chemical
and/or sensory characteristics of the food's raw material.chan
robles virtual law library
(l) Recommended
Dietary Allowances (RDA) - levels of nutrient intakes which are
considered
adequate to maintain health and provide reasonable levels or reserves
in
body tissues of nearly all health persons in the population.
(m) Sangkap
Pinoy Seal Program (SPSP) - a strategy to encourage food
manufacturers
to fortify processed foods or food products with essential nutrients at
levels approved by the DOH. The fundamental concept of the program is
to
authorize food manufacturers to use the DOH seal of acceptance for
processed
foods or food products, after these products passed a set of defined
criteria.
The seal is a guide used by consumers in selecting nutritious foods.
(n) Unprocessed
food - food that has not undergone any treatment that results in
substantial
change in the original state even if it may have been divided boned,
skinned,
peeled, ground, cut cleaned, trimmed, fresh-frozen or chilled.
Sec. 4. The
Philippine Food fortification Program. - The Philippine Food
fortification
Program, hereinafter referred to as the Program, shall cover all
imported
or locally processed foods or food products for sale or distribution in
the Philippines; Provided, That, dietary supplements for which
established
standards have already been prescribed by the DOH through the BFAD and
which standards include specifications for nutrient composition or
levels
of fortification shall not be covered by this Act.
The program
shall consist of (1) Voluntary Food Fortification and (2) Mandatory
Food
Fortification.chan
robles virtual law library
Sec. 5. Voluntary
Food Fortification. - Under the Sangkap Pinoy Seal Program (SPSP),
the Department shall encourage the fortification of all processed foods
or food products based on rules and regulations which the DOH through
the
BFAD shall issue after the effectivity of this act.
Manufacturers
who opt to fortify their processed foods of food products but do not
apply
for Sangkap Pinoy Seal shall fortify their processed food or food
products
based on acceptable standards on food fortification set by the DOH
through
the BFAD.
Sec. 6. Mandatory
Food Fortification. - (a) the fortification of staple foods based
on
standards sets by the DOH through the BFAD is hereby made mandatory for
the following:
(1)
Rice -
with Iron;
(2)
Wheat
flour
0 with vitamins A and Iron;
(3)
Refined
sugar - with vitamin A;
(4)
Cooking
oil - with vitamin A; and
(5)
Other
staple
foods with nutrients as may later required by The NCC.
The National Nutrition
Council (NCC) shall require other processed foods or food products to
be
fortified based on the findings of nutrition surveys. Such requirement
shall be promulgated through regulations to be issued by the Department
of Health (DOH) through the Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD) and other
concerned
agencies.chan
robles virtual law library
(b) The fortification
of processed foods or food products under this Section shall be
undertaken
by the manufacturers: Provided, That in the case of imported
processed
foods or food products, the required fortification shall be done by the
producers/manufacturers of such imported processed foods or food
products.
Otherwise, the importer shall have responsibility of fortifying the
imported
processed foods or food products before said products are allowed to be
distributed or sold to the public: Provided, further, That the
implementation
of the mandatory fortification for wheat flour, refined sugar, cooking
oil and rice, including those milled and/or distributed by the National
Food Authority, shall commence after four (4) years from the
effectivity
of this Act.
(c) The DOH
guidelines on micronutrient fortification of processed food or food
products
included in Administrative Order No. 4-A series of 1995 and such other
necessary guidelines that may be issued by the DOH, shall serve as a
basis
for the addition of micronutrient(s) to processed foods or food
products
to avoid over or under fortification that may create imbalance in the
diet
as well as avoid misleading label claims to gain competitive marketing
advantage.
(d) Manufacturers
of processed foods or food products shall include on the label a
statement
of "nutrition facts" indicating the nutrient(s) and the quantities of
said
nutrients added in the food.
(e) Imported
rice, wheat flour, refined sugar, cooking oil and other processed foods
or food products that may identified later by the NCC, shall comply
with
the requirements of this Act on entry in country, at the end of
manufacturing
process and/or at all points of sale or distribution.
Sec. 7. Quality
Assurance. - The agencies charged with the implementation of this
Act
shall establish a quality assurance system. Likewise, the manufacturers
and importers of processed foods or food products shall also establish
their own quality assurance system in accordance with the quality
assurance
system of the implementing agencies.
Sec. 8. Implementation,
Monitoring and Review. - The DOH through the BFAD shall be the lead
agency responsible for the implementation and monitoring of this Act
while
the NNC, the policy-making and coordinating body of nutrition, shall
serve
as the advisory board on food fortification.
The DOH shall
also be responsible in the conduct of promotional and advocacy
activities
on the use of fortified processed foods or food products through its
Sangkap
Pinoy Seal Program (SPSP) and/or other programs designed to promote
nutrition.
Products approved by the SPSP shall be allowed to use the Sangkap Pinoy
Seal. Further, the DOH is hereby authorized to charge reasonable fees
for
applications in the SPSP and use of such fees in the promotion and
advocacy
activities of nutrition.chan
robles virtual law library
The NCC shall
conduct a periodic review of the micronutrients added to food. This
review
will provide the basis for determining if the mandatory fortification
is
still required or not. The review shall be done at least every five (5)
years to coincide with the conduct of the Food and Nutrition Research
Institute's
(FNRI) national nutrition survey and/or the assessment of the
Philippine
Plan of Action for Nutrition (PPAN).
The local government
units, through their health officers or agricultural officers or
nutritionist-dieticians
or the sanitary inspectors shall assist in monitoring/checking that
foods
to be mandated to be fortified like rice, refined sugar, wheat flour
and
cooking oil are properly fortified and labeled with "nutrition facts"
indicating
the specific micronutrient it was fortified with.
The local food
industries shall report on the production, marketing and distribution
of
fortified foods. They shall annual reports to the DOH, also indicating
their industrial concerns and recommendations.
Sec. 9. Support
to Affected Manufacturers. - The following government agencies
shall
support the implementation of this Act through their respective
programs:
(a) The
Department
of Trade and Industry (DTI) is hereby required to assist and support
affected
manufacturers in upgrading their technologies by helping them obtain
soft
loans and financial assistance for the procurement of technologies and
machines to comply with the provision of this Act;
(b)
The
Department
of Science and Technology (DOST) shall develop and implement
comprehensive
programs for the acquisition, design and manufacture of machines and
technologies
and transfer said machines and technologies to manufacturers;
(c)
The
Land
Bank of the Philippines (LBP) and the livelihood Corporation (LIVERCOR)
are hereby required to assist and support the implementation of this
Act
by granting loans, to affected manufacturers, at preferential rates; and
(d)
The
various
agencies/institutions with accredited analytical laboratories for
nutrient
analysis and other technology development generators shall provide the
necessary services that may be required by the food industry in
compliance
with this Act.
Sec. 10. Noncompliance
with Fortification Process. - The following shall be considered non
compliance with the fortification process:
(a) if
the
food fortification levels do not comply with the DOH requirements,
except
when the deviation from the fortification levels are justified and are
properly declared in the labeling;
(b)
If the
fortificant
used is different from that approved by the DOH; and
(c)
If the
process
of fortification does not conform to the DOH standard.
Sec. 11. Administrative
Sanctions. - The DOH through the BFAD, after notice and hearing,
shall
impose any or all of the following administrative sanctions in cases of
noncompliance with the food fortification guidelines it has set:chan
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(a)
Denial
of registration of the processed foods or food products by the DOH
through
the BFAD if the processed foods or food products do not comply with the
food fortification requirements. Said processed foods or food products
shall not be allowed to be put in the market;
(b)
Order
the
recall of the processed foods or food product(s); and
(c)
Impose
a
fine or not less than Three Hundred Thousand Pesos (P300,000.00) and
suspension
of registration for the first violation; not more than Six hundred
thousand
pesos (P600,000.00) and suspension of registration for the second
violation;
and not more than one million pesos (P1,000,000.00) and cancellation of
the registration of the product for the third violation of the
provisions
of this Act or its Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR).
Sec. 12. Implementing
Rules and Regulations. - The DOH through the BFAD and in
consultation
with other concerned government agencies, non-government organizations,
private sectors and consumer groups involved in nutrition, shall
formulate
the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) necessary to implement the
provisions of this Act within ninety (90) days from the approval of
this
Act. The IRR issued pursuant to this Section shall take effect thirty
(30)
days after publication in a national newspaper of general application.
Sec. 13. International
Commitments. - Nothing in this Act is intended to violate
provisions
of Treaties and International Agreements to which the Philippines is a
party.
Sec. 14. Repealing
Clause. - All laws, decrees, rules and regulations, executive
orders
inconsistent with the provisions of this Act are hereby repealed or
modified
accordingly.
Sec. 15. Separability
Clause. - If any provision of this Act is declared unconstitutional
or unlawful, the remaining provisions shall remain legal and in full
effect.chan
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Sec. 16. Effectivity.
- This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
Approved:
November 7, 2000.