How the FDA’s approval for food additives works, and why experts say a loophole allows companies to bypass it

How the FDA’s approval for food additives works, and why experts say a loophole allows companies to bypass it


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates food and health-related products to ensure they’re safe for public health. Today, it’s estimated to oversee 80% of the U.S. food supply.

This also places ingredient safety regulations under the FDA’s authority. According to a 1958 law, companies looking to introduce a new food additive into the food supply are supposed to file a petition with the FDA, triggering a lengthy process of scientific investigation and public comment.

However, experts say a legal loophole has allowed companies to bypass this process entirely.

“We know from prior research that over span of decades, thousands of ingredients are added to the food supply without the FDA even knowing about it,” according to Jennifer Pomeranz, an associate professor of public health and policy and management at New York University. “It’s impossible to quantify because we don’t actually know which ingredients are added.”

“What we have seen over time is that companies are creating new ingredients, having their own scientists or hiring a small group of outside scientists to make their own determination that an ingredient is safe,” said Melanie Benesh, vice president of government affairs at the Environmental Working Group. “Once they self-declare that their ingredient is safe, they don’t have to go through that pre-market process.”

More than 750 new food additives have been introduced into the food supply through this loophole by the food and chemical industry between 2000 and 2021, according to research by EWG.

However, supporters of the food additive industry argue that all ingredients are tested with the same rigor as additives that go through the pre-market approval process.

“Both process require the exact same requirements,” argued Carla Saunders, executive director at the International Food Additives Council. “There’s a plethora of scientific evidence needed to ensure that those ingredients are safe, reliable, and effective.”

Watch the video above to find out why the FDA allows so many chemicals in America’s food supply.



Source

Jim Cramer has faith in Danaher’s turnaround as life sciences comes back to life
Health

Jim Cramer has faith in Danaher’s turnaround as life sciences comes back to life

Life sciences stocks are seeing a resurgence — and that’s good news for Danaher . Connecting the dots to better times ahead for the struggling portfolio name, Jim Cramer thinks the industry turnaround is best illustrated by looking at Agilent Technologies ‘ recovery from a post-Covid rut. Shares are up around 50% from their April […]

Read More
‘Advice was so good,’ says CEO who used ChatGPT to pitch new ideas to AI versions of business icons
Health

‘Advice was so good,’ says CEO who used ChatGPT to pitch new ideas to AI versions of business icons

Joanna Stober, Midi Health CEO and co-founder, has never had an opportunity to run her business plans past legendary venture capital investor John Doerr, chairman at Kleiner Perkins. But that didn’t stop her from tapping Doerr, in an AI version, for advice on growing her startup, a virtual clinic offering midlife health care for women. […]

Read More
Eli Lilly cuts cash prices of Zepbound weight loss drug vials on direct-to-consumer site
Health

Eli Lilly cuts cash prices of Zepbound weight loss drug vials on direct-to-consumer site

The Eli Lilly logo appears on the company’s office in San Diego, California, U.S., Nov. 21, 2025. Mike Blake | Reuters Eli Lilly on Monday said it is lowering the cash prices of single-dose vials of its blockbuster weight loss drug Zepbound on its direct-to-consumer platform, LillyDirect, building on efforts by the company and the […]

Read More