The Nutri-Score is regularly attacked by manufacturers, who accuse it of giving poor marks to regional products such as cheeses. UFC-Que Choisir has launched a study to verify this assertion.
Article written by
Published
Update
Reading time : 1 min.
Two thirds of French regional food products are well rated by the Nutri-Score, with an A, B or C score, assures UFC-Que Choisir in a study published on Tuesday May 10. “Contrary to the speeches of lobbyists in the corridors of Brussels who highlight a few examples, we realize with a much larger sample that regional products are rather favored by the Nutri-Score”comments Olivier Andrault, in charge of the food mission within the consumer association.
The local branches of UFC-Que Choisir selected 588 products for the study using recipes from their region. In total, 26% are rated A, 13% are rated B and 23% obtain a C. Among the 120 products rated A or B and which are therefore recommended for their nutritional qualities, approximately one third are fruits and vegetables such as red apricot from Roussillon or Nantes lamb’s lettuce. There are also 34 meats and poultry and 30 cooked dishes, such as Auvergne hotpot or Castelnaudary cassoulet.
The Nutri-Score, implemented in 2016, is now optional in France but the European Commission plans to make nutritional labeling compulsory by the end of 2022 and the French score could be chosen. This choice is disputed by certain industrialists, who accuse it of penalizing regional products such as cheeses, of which approximately 90% are classified D and E. The Roquefort interprofession thus asked last October to be exempted from this system of labeling and the Minister of Agriculture Julien Denormandie took a position in the process by inviting “review the methodology” Nutri-Score.
In its study, the UFC-Que Choisir counts 25% of foods classified D and 13% of foods rated E. “It is not a question of banning these products, but only of saying that given their high fat, salt or sugar content, they should be consumed in a more reasonable way”, argues Olivier Andrault. The consumer association also notes that certain olive oils or Franche-Comté cancoillotte are rated C, which favors them over other oils and cheeses, which are generally rated D or E.