EAS Releases Mutual Recognition Guide

October 6, 2009

1 Min Read
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BRUSSELS, Belgium EAS released a new guide, How to Apply Mutual Recognition for the Free Trade of Food Products across the EU, to help companies successfully apply mutual recognition when marketing products into different EU markets. The guide includes an introduction to the principle of mutual recognition and outlines the rights and obligations of companies and EU member states under the regulation.

Mutual recognition is one of the fundamental principles of the EU internal market, giving companies access to the markets of 27 member states without having to reformulate or change products, so it is imperative that companies understand how to use it successfully, said Elodie Lebastard, EAS regulatory adviser. The new mutual recognition regulation now makes mutual recognition the rule, and it will create substantial business opportunities, especially for food supplements and functional food manufacturers, which will be very welcomed in these difficult economic times.

The new mutual recognition regulation specifically obliges EU member states to apply mutual recognition as a rule, and reduces the national authorities abilities to restrict market access of products lawfully marketed in another member state. The EAS guide clarifies the conditions under which EU member states can refuse to apply mutual recognition, covers the application of mutual recognition in borderline cases, and explains why the principle is not applied in many cases. It also covers the recourse for companies when mutual recognition is not applied by a member state, such as Product Contact Points (PCPs), the SOLVIT system and ways of making complaints about the non-application of mutual recognition.

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