Thank you, Madam Chair.
The Centre for Science in the Public Interest is a non-profit consumer health advocacy organization specializing in nutrition issues, with offices in Ottawa and Washington, D.C. Our Ottawa health advocacy is funded by 120,000 subscriptions to the Canadian edition of our monthly Nutrition Action Healthletter, which you all receive. CSPI does not accept funding from industry or government, and Nutrition Action does not carry advertisements.
Last month the Centre for Science in the Public Interest published a report called “Salty to a Fault: Varied Sodium Levels Show Lowering Salt in Processed Foods is Feasible”. Experts agree that excess sodium intake kills more Canadians every year than does any other chemical substance. But in countries like Canada, three-quarters of the sodium comes from salt added to foods by food manufacturers and restaurants.
In “Salty to a Fault”, we reported samples of products in 41 categories of groceries and nine categories of restaurant foods that Health Canada and others consider to be major sources of sodium. These categories include soups; sandwiches, especially bread, cheese, and meat; salad dressings; cereals; sauces; and restaurant foods generally.
“Salty to a Fault” reveals that brands of foods often vary widely in sodium levels within otherwise comparable categories. For example, we found sodium levels ranging from 40 milligrams of sodium in a 70-gram serving of french fries at a Swiss Chalet restaurant, which leaves salting to the customer, to 555 milligrams in fries at Harvey's. Likewise, there were 320 milligrams of sodium in a half-cup serving of Classico tomato and basil pasta sauce, compared with 710 milligrams in Antico organic tomato and basil sauce.
Twofold variations were common among products that we surveyed.
Despite industry claims that large amounts of salt are needed to make dough rise, act as an emulsifying agent or anti-caking agent, or preserve and improve the taste of foods, these variations in our report reveal that it is demonstrably possible to make countless foods with less sodium, and many foods with much less sodium.
The expectations for success in Canada's efforts to reduce sodium are justifiably higher than for the United Kingdom or Finland. Those countries were both pioneers, and Canada has been able to learn from their experiences. Also, the Government of Canada has legal authority to refine regulations governing nutrition labelling, high-sodium warning labels, compositional standards for standardized staple foods such as cheese and pickles, and food additives, including low-sodium substitutes for salt, while Finland and the United Kingdom must defer to the European Union authority over many aspects of those regulatory options.
Nutrition labelling also has been mandatory for most foods in Canada since December 2005. This helps officials and our organization monitor sodium levels in prepackaged foods, though not in restaurants, and identify the range of sodium levels within categories of comparable products.
Our report makes 12 recommendations. I will highlight a few.
First, setting and monitoring category-specific sodium reduction targets must be combined with mandatory front-of-pack warning labels for high-sodium products.
Second, the daily value for sodium specified in the food and drug regulations--used as the basis for nutrition facts label information--should be reduced from 2,400 milligrams to 1,500 milligrams.
Third, serving sizes upon which nutrition facts information is reported on food labels should be based on the standardized reference amounts specified in schedule M of the food and drug regulations, or other appropriate standardized sizes, and not left to the unfettered discretion of manufacturers.
Fourth, the food and drug regulations limiting the scope of the nutrition facts requirements to prepackaged foods should be expanded to ensure that at least the amounts of calories and warning labels for high-sodium foods be posted on the menus or menu boards of large chain restaurants with interprovincial operations.
And last, Canada's Food Guide should be revised to highlight the importance of, and strengthen advice about, reducing sodium intake.
In closing, setting and monitoring achievement of sodium reduction targets for at least several dozen food categories is the cornerstone of an effective sodium reduction strategy.
Companies' efforts to achieve those targets should begin now. They should not wait until the sodium working group report is published.
However, to ensure that Canadian sodium reduction targets are successful, regulatory amendments are needed to eliminate some impediments to reductions, and new regulations may be needed to mandate targets currently envisioned as voluntary if the call for sodium reductions is not taken seriously by affected companies.
Minister of Health Aglukkaq needn't wait to impress upon companies the importance of reducing sodium levels. Health Canada's message should be clear: salt should be used judiciously in foods, not gratuitously. Persistently gratuitous use of salt should be met with regulatory action.
Thank you, Madam Chair.