Officially Approved By The Eu: Four Insects Hiding In Your Food • Insects Are Not Suitable For Human Consumption Due To Parasites And Chitin • Another Attack On The Food Supply, A Depopulation Tool
Truth11.com Editor Note:
Dylan Eleven
We have reported on the dangers to humans of eating insects. Two articles are listed below that cover this further.
They want people eating insects because in 30.33% of the cases, the parasites found in insects were pathogenic for humans.
Insects also contain a structural component in their exoskeletons called chitin which is toxic to humans.
Europe Reloaded / Pam Barker
ER Editor: We’ve seen this reported elsewhere, but these bugs the WEF optimistically tells us we should be eating carry their own parasites, putting us at risk. Here’s Rebel News on this topic:
This is the study Sheila Gunn Reid discusses in the video:
A parasitological evaluation of edible insects and their role in the transmission of parasitic diseases to humans and animals
‘Edible insects are an underestimated reservoir of human and animal parasites.’
Officially approved by the EU: Four insects hiding in your food
EU citizens who do not want to unknowingly eat insects should be particularly careful: The EU Commission has already approved four types of insects in different forms as “edible insects”.
FREEWEST MEDIA
BRUSSELS – The most recent approval was on January 5: From now on, after mealworms, grasshoppers and crickets, the grain mold beetle can also be used as an ingredient in foods such as bread, soups, pasta, snacks, peanut butter and chocolate products.
The mealworm received the first approval for a so-called “edible insect” in June 2021 : The EU Commission’s Implementing Regulation 2021/822 approved the placing on the market of dried larvae of Tenebrio molitor (meal beetle) as a “novel food”.
The SAS EAP Group from France has submitted the application and is allowed to market the mealworm in the Union. It may be sold individually or with a maximum content of 10 grams in protein products, cookies, dishes made from legumes and pasta products.
If insects are used, there must be a note on the packaging of the food that consumption may cause allergic reactions in people with known allergies to crustaceans and molluscs and their products and to house dust mites.
In November 2021, the second “edible insect” was approved by Implementing Regulation 2021/1975 : “Fair Insects BV” from the Netherlands has since been allowed to market frozen, dried and powdered Locusta migratoria (migratory locusts) in the EU.
Depending on the form of processing, the locusts may be used as ingredients in different maximum levels in the products such as processed potato products; dishes made from legumes and products made from pasta, meat substitution, soups and soup concentrates, legumes and vegetables in cans/jars, salads, beer-like beverages, alcoholic beverage mixes, chocolate products, frozen milk-based fermented products, cured meats.
Since 2022 and 2023 respectively, the domestic cricket (Acheta domesticus) has been permitted in various forms of processing. Implementing regulation 2022/188 allows the use in frozen, dried and powdered form. The application came again from “Fair Insects BV”. The house cricket, just as locusts, may be used in similar foods.
Since January 3, the Vietnamese company “Cricket One Co. Ltd” has also been allowed to sell “partially defatted powder from Acheta domesticus” in the EU by implementing regulation 2023/5 . Potentially affected foods are multigrain bread and rolls; crackers and breadsticks, cereal bars, dry bakery premixes, cookies, pasta products and many more.
The executive order 2023/58 of January 5 allows “Ynsect NL BV” from the Netherlands to bring larvae of Alphitobius diaperinus (grain mold beetle) in frozen, paste, dried and powdered form as a new food to EU citizens. The list of food categories in which the larvae can be used as an ingredient in most processed foods.
Original Article: https://www.europereloaded.com/officially-approved-by-the-eu-four-insects-hiding-in-your-food/
Note the following two related articles:
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