Turkey: No additives can be used in royal jelly, pollen, and bee bread

Published 2021년 4월 26일

Tridge summary

The Ministry has prepared a draft Communiqué for the regulation of bee products to be sold as food or supplementary food in Turkey. The draft outlines the permitted bee products, their definitions, and quality standards, including the absence of impurities and specifications for propolis. The draft also sets minimum pollen contents for bee pollen, dried bee pollen, and bee bread, and prescribes storage conditions and labeling requirements. It also grants a transition period for businesses to adjust to the new regulations.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Ministry prepared the Turkish Food Codex Bee Products Notification Draft. Within the scope of the draft Communiqué, he purchases bee products such as royal jelly, royal jelly powder, propolis products, bee pollen, dried bee pollen and bee bread (perga), which are put on the market as food or supplementary food. However, mixtures of these products or other foods or supplements used as ingredients will not be covered by the regulation. The draft also identified the compounds and definitions of commercially available bee products. Accordingly, no bee product will contain any impurities. Propolis will comply with the characteristics specified in national or international standards, especially international standards. It will also be forbidden to add external substances to royal jelly, royal jelly powder, bee pollen, dried bee pollen and bee bread. Minimum pollen contents of bee pollen, dried bee pollen and bee bread by plant source such as heather, canola, alfalfa, sunflower, ...

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